Category Archives: CEFRES Team

Paul G. Keil: Research & CV

Piggers, Pig-Dogs, Feral Pigs, and Other Pig-Related Actors: More-than-human relations emerging through the hunt in Australia

Research Project: Bewildering Boar
Research Area 2: Norms and Transgressions

Contact: paul.keil[at]cefres.cz

Academia: https://mq.academia.edu/PaulKeil

Keil is trained in social anthropology, his research guided by theories that understand cognition, action, and culture as socio-ecological achievements emerging from organism-environment interactions. From 2007-2011, as part of an interdisciplinary cognitive science team, Keil conducted work on collaborative remembering with older couples, examining how memory is distributed across social and material relations. In 2010, Keil conducted ethnographic research on sheepdog herding competitions, examining how human and dog complemented the other, their respective species-specific capacities integrated into an interspecies distributed cognitive system.  Postgraduate research was a multispecies ethnography and social anthropology of human-elephant relationships in Assam, northeast India, fieldwork funded by the Prime Minister’s Australia-Asia Endeavour Award. The broad objective was to examine how people’s environments, worldviews, and practices emerged in coordination with the lives of elephants, and to conceptualise forms of human-elephant sociality beyond the oft-typified dynamic of conflict, competition, and domination. Keil was awarded his PhD from Macquarie University, Australia, and is also a honorary postdoctoral fellow at Macquarie.

PROJECT: Piggers, Pig-Dogs, Feral Pigs, and Other Pig-Related Actors: More-than-human relations emerging through the hunt in Australia

Working as part of the TANDEM research project Bewildering Boars, Keil is conducting an anthropological study of recreational pig-hunting with dogs in Australia. The project is entitled: Piggers, Pig-Dogs, Feral Pigs, and Other Pig-Related Actors: More-than-human relations emerging through the hunt in Australia. It will examine the interspecies relationships constituting pig-dogging culture, and the broader historical, social, and environmental factors structuring those relations. The project has three objectives. First, to critique the construction of pigs as feral, invasive and hence ‘killable’, and to explore the link between pig-hunting and the animal’s disruption of postcolonial, ecological projects. Second, an ethnography of the mutually affecting interactions of human, pig and dog in hunting-related activities; analysing, for example, how hunters read and coordinate with nonhuman agents, and how gender and class identity is enacted through this mode of interspecies engagement. Finally, working with epidemiologists, identify the socio-ecological conditions for zoonotic transmission in pig-hunts. Anthropology can inform disease management strategies and grasp how disease is reconfiguring human-dog-pig relations.

CV

Education

2017: PhD, Anthropology. Macquarie University
Thesis Title – Living in Elephant Worlds: Human-elephant relations on the fringe of forest and village in Assam, Northeast India

2010: Bachelor of Arts Honours, Anthropology. Macquarie University

2009: Bachelor of Arts, Psychology. Macquarie University

2001: Bachelor of Design Honours, Visual communication. University of Technology, Sydney

Publications

Selected articles in peer reviewed journals
  • Keil, P.G. (2017). Unusual human-elephant encounters in North-East India. Journal of Religious and Political Practice, 3(3), 196-211
  • Keil, P.G. (2015). Human-Sheepdog Distributed Cognitive Systems: An analysis of interspecies scaffolding at a sheepdog trial. Journal of Cognition and Culture, 15(5), 508-529
  • Harris, C.B., Keil, P.G., Barnier, A. J., & Sutton, J. (2011). We Remember, We Forget: Collaborative Remembering in Older Couples. Discourse Processes, 46(4), 267-303
  • Sutton, J., Harris, C.B., Keil, P.G., & Barnier, A. J. (2010). The psychology of memory, extended mind and socially distributed remembering. Phenomenology of Cognitive Science, 9(4), 521-560
Book Chapters
  • Keil, P.G. (2016). Elephant-Human Dandi: How Humans and Elephants Move Through the Fringes of Forest and Village in Assam. In P. Locke & J. Buckingham (eds.), Rethinking Human-Elephant Relation in South Asia (pp. 197-223). New Delhi: Oxford University Press 
Book reviews
  • Keil, P.G. (2016). Y. Musharbash & G. Henning Presterudstuen, 2014. Monster Anthropology in Australasia and Beyond. The Australian Journal of Anthropology, 27(3), 415-417.
 Online essays
Selected Conference Presentations
  • Locke, P. & Keil. P.G. (2018). Beyond the Disciplinary Silo- Human-Elephant Interactions and The Imperative for Interdisciplinary Collaboration. American Anthropological Association, San Jose, California
  • Keil, P.G. (2018). Humans and elephants, co-creating worlds in Assam. Locating northeast India: Human mobility, resource flows, and spatial linkages. Tezpur University, Assam
  • Keil, P.G. (2016). Hidden elephants and the problem of the wild in multispecies ethnography. Anthropological Society Conference, University of Sydney
  • Keil, P.G. (2016). Colonising in the footsteps of elephants. School of Oriental and African Studies Elephant Conference, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore
  • Keil, P.G. (2015). Uncanny human-elephant entanglements in Northeast India. Australian Anthropological Society Conference, University of Melbourne
  • Keil, P.G. (2015). Feeding a living god. New Zealand Asian Studies Society Conference, Canterbury University

Raluca Muresan: Research & CV

Culture, Urban Society, and Representation of Territories. The Architecture of Public Theaters in the Eastern Lands of the Habsburg Monarchy (1770-1812)

Research Area 1 – Displacements, “Dépaysements” and Discrepancies: People, Knowledge and Practices

Contact: raluca.muresan@cefres.cz (from 1st September 2018)

My research seeks to understand the mechanisms behind the rise of public theater buildings in various towns in the Eastern lands of the Habsburg Monarchy between 1770 and 1812. It therefore looks into their architectural specificities and into their impact on the representation of the scales of urbanity of these towns. I use the geographical term “Eastern” that refers to the countries to the East of the Holy Roman Germanic Empire border: the Hungarian Kingdom, including the lands of Saint Stephen, and the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria. Continue reading Raluca Muresan: Research & CV

Ekaterina Zheltova: Research & CV

National belonging, transnational localities and ideologies of language: Discursive practices at the Greek-Albanian borderlands

Research Area 3 – Objects, Traces, Mapping: Everyday Experience of Spaces

Contact: ekaterina.zheltova@cefres.cz (from 1st September 2018)

In my PhD project I explore how people living in the Albanian-Greek borderland region imagine and narrate their lives on the border, their relations with the nation-state(s), and their linguistic experience in this contested space.

The border region of the Albanian-Greek frontier is one of the vivid examples of a space existing in a dichotomy of controversial national narratives, different languages spoken sometimes by the closest neighbors, long-existing conflicts, often economic or political but usually interpreted in ethnic terms, that coexist with the “mixed” marriages, friendships and businesses. Continue reading Ekaterina Zheltova: Research & CV

Felipe Kaiser Fernandes: Research & CV

Rise of a Merchant Nation: An Ethnography of Vietnamese Bazaar Economy in Central Europe

Research Area 1 – Displacements, “Dépaysements” and Discrepancies: People, Knowledge and Practice

Contact: felipe.fernandes@cefres.cz

As a third-year PhD student in Anthropology at Ehess and a Phd fellow at Cefres, I conduct a participant observation of Sapa marketplace, situated in the suburbs of Prague. My aim is to analyze traders’ ways of thinking, working and living in this market in an attempt to characterize its role and its importance to the Vietnamese migration in Central Eastern Europe. Therefore, my thesis studies the pathways of specific Vietnamese traders who came from North Vietnam in the 60s,70s and 80s, the rise of the merchant networks and the bazaar economy nowadays in Eurasia. In this sense, my research highlights the capacity of the bazaar economy (Geertz, 1979) to federate, considering several levels: countries, cities and urban territories. Continue reading Felipe Kaiser Fernandes: Research & CV

Pavel Baloun: Research & CV

“The Gypsy Scourge!” Creation and Implementation of Anti-Gypsy Measures in Czechoslovakia and After, 1918-1942

Research Area 2 – Norms & Transgressions

Contact: pavel.baloun@cefres.cz (from 1st September 2018)

My PhD deals with the long-term process of criminalization of those inhabitants who were labelled as “Gypsies”. It focuses on exploring continuities and discontinuities in enforcing anti-Gypsy measures in relation to the Genocide of Roma and Sinti in the Czech lands during the Second World War. The main aim of the project is to reconstruct the ways how anti-Gypsy measures, understood here as a complex of diverse legal norms worked against a heterogeneous group of inhabitants labelled as “Gypsies”. Continue reading Pavel Baloun: Research & CV