This month we speak with Radhika Gajjala about cyberfeminism and Sofia Ashraf about online content creation.
Online Gods is part theoretical exploration into some of the key concepts in the anthropology of media, and part research into how increased online interaction is changing the public sphere. Taking India and the India diaspora as its focal point, the podcast continues in the great anthropological tradition of bringing the global and the specific into conversation with one another as it analyses what online discussions do to political participation, displays of faith and feelings of national belonging. We are also intrigued as to whether a podcast can produce ethnographic theory. We believe It is possible to be both sophisticated and yet comprehensible, and that the spoken form can bring forth an accessibility that is sometimes missing from the written form. We even wonder whether academic podcasting might herald a technologically-enabled return to the centrality of oral traditions in intellectual exploration – can podcasting weaken reading’s hegemonic hold on consumption of academic knowledge? Online Gods is a key initiative of the project ONLINERPOL, an official podcast collaborator of the American Anthropological Association and has a publishing partnership with EPW Engage. This podcast is hosted by Ian M. Cook and Sahana Udupa.
Gajjala, Radhika, ed. Cyberculture and the Subaltern: Weavings of the Virtual and Real. Rowman & Littlefield, 2012.
Gajjala, Radhika. Cyber selves: Feminist ethnographies of South Asian women. Rowman Altamira, 2004.
Gajjala, Radhika, et al. Cyberfeminism 2.0. Peter Lang Publishing, 2012