Abstract

«Казымский переворот»: к истории первого визуально-антропологического проекта в России

Highlights

  • In August of 1991 in Western Siberia, the well-known Canadian anthropologist Asen Balikci and his American colleague Mark Badger together with Russian researchers organised a field seminar for representatives of indigenous peoples of the North that took place in a small village of Kazym (Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Area). This was to become the first visual anthropology project undertaken in Russia

  • Having sparked interest in the new interdisciplinary field at the intersection of science and art, the seminar contributed to the subsequent gradual formation of visual anthropology community in the country

  • An attempt to see what constituted the methodological basis of the seminar as well as the desire to establish events of that time and understand their meaning for today were an impetus for writing this article, where apart from the published sources the author used interviews with the Kazym seminar participants

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Summary

Introduction

An attempt to see what constituted the methodological basis of the seminar as well as the desire to establish events of that time and understand their meaning for today were an impetus for writing this article, where apart from the published sources the author used interviews with the Kazym seminar participants.

Results
Conclusion
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