Mixed Messages: Mediating Native Belonging in Asia Russia - Talk with Dr. Kathryn Graber

February 3, 2022, 12:30 pm to 1:30 pm

Virtual (Zoom)

Join the Eurasia Research Cluster and the Department of Anthropology on February 3, 2022 at 12:30 pm PT, for the virtual Sawchen Lecture Series, featuring Dr. Kathryn Graber of Indiana University.

Register here via Zoom: https://ubc.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_VSYsyydYQzWihJQX3JFMqg

Abstract

Focusing on language and media in eastern Siberia, Mixed Messages (Cornell University Press, 2020) engages debates about the role of minority media in society, alternative visions of modernity, and the impact of media on everyday language use. The book demonstrates that language and the production, circulation, and consumption of media are practices by which residents of the region perform and negotiate competing possible identities. What languages should be used in newspapers, magazines, or radio and television broadcasts, and by whom? What kinds of publics are and are not possible through media? How exactly do discourses move into, out of, and through the media to affect everyday social practices? In this book talk, Kathryn Graber will address these questions through her ethnography of the Russian Federation’s Buryat territories, a multilingual and multiethnic region on the Mongolian border with a complex relationship to both Europe and Asia.

Bio 

Kathryn E. Graber is associate professor of Anthropology and Central Eurasian Studies at Indiana University Bloomington. A linguistic and sociocultural anthropologist, she researches minority language politics, multilingualism, mass media, materiality, and intellectual property in Russia and Mongolia. She is the author of Mixed Messages: Mediating Native Belonging in Asian Russia (Cornell University Press, 2020) and co-editor of Storytelling as Narrative Practice: Ethnographic Approaches to the Tales We Tell (Brill, 2019). Dr. Graber’s research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the US Department of Education, and the Social Science Research Council, among others. She is also an award-winning teacher.


First Nations land acknowledegement

We acknowledge that UBC’s campuses are situated within the traditional territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh, and in the traditional, ancestral, unceded territory of the Syilx Okanagan Nation and their peoples.


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