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    Drawing as concept


    Scene of a street sale in Rio as a pencil sketch.

    Recently, Laura Lamas Abraia pushed all workshop at KU Leuven (Belgium) participants to think about the possibility to conceive of the drawing as concept. I am not sure how to get there yet but when asked to include images in a recent article on the sensory attunement to the city, I met once more with the challenge of how to do justice to my ethical impetus of wanting to respect the privacy of my interlocutors and the wish to show with more than words what happens on the streets of Rio de Janeiro.


    From this challenge resulted my first sketches of a street vending situation. Of course, it is far from a concept. But still, a beginning. This is finally a move forward from my corridor encounter with Steven Van Wolputte who in 2019 offered to enrich my book Comparing Conviviality with some marvellous drawings of his own on the basis of my visual fieldwork material.


    Let's see if it will find the light of the day in publishing.



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    Habilitation / Livre docente

    Done.

    The German academic world is sometimes particular, despite having some resemblance in other parts of the world, for example, São Paulo. After your doctorate, you continue on precarious contracts - other than the few who pass directly onto Junior professorships - and start preparing a second project. It needs to be distinct from your doctoral research. In Anthropology, this refers to both regional and thematic/conceptual expertise.

    While in the midst of writing my second book, my colleagues at Cologne University convinced me last year that this further seal of academic excellence and loyalty to a peer group would not do harm. I embarked on submitting 6 peer-reviewed, article-length text that show an internal coherence, wrote a long introduction on Assembling Social Hierarchies, submitted all to the faculty and four reviewers, received positive verdicts. The faculty followed the recommendation of the reviewers and invited me to submit yet another three different topics for my oral habilitation colloquium, open to the faculty and with the necessary participation of 24 full and associate professors.

    I had the pleasure to present a new research idea on Urban wood/s to sixty interested and enthusiastic colleagues and students. If the faculty next Wednesday follows the unanimous recommendation to also accept that oral habilitation exam, I will have reached what they call the end of the ladder. Done.

    An inaugural lecture will follow, and hopefully soon the second book as well.
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    VII International Symposium on the history and Culture of Brazil

    I will be presenting at the 9th roundtable on "Identities and Alterities" of this international symposium that honors the struggles for freedom in 200 years of an independent Brazil. I will discuss some of the current alterities in Brazli that arise from the recent arrival of West Africans and Southern Europeans in the city of Rio de Janeiro. I will discuss notions of Africanness and Europeanness in my interlocutors' narratives and experiences in Rio de Janeiro and how this discussion facilitates an understanding of some of the complexities of historically grown, currently active social hierarchies and racism in the city.
    Missed it? Please go and listen to our debate here!
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    Apresentação e debate do livro em lançamento

    Três debates do meu livro em lançamento

    I: Museu Nacional, Horto Botânico, Quinta da Boa Vista, s/n - São Cristóvão, Rio de Janeiro
    12 de março 2020, 9:30 horas
    com os debatedores
    Joana Bahia, Professora titular, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
    El Hadji Diallo, Jornalista e tradutor independente
    Charles P. Gomes, Pesquisador, Fundação Casa de Rui Barbosa
     
    II: Núcleo interdisciplinar de Estudos Migratórios, IPPUR, UFRJ, Rua da Lapa 120 / 204
    13 de março 2020, 17:00 horas
    com a debatedora
    Miriam de Oliveira Santos, Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro

    III. Centro de Estudos Africanos, Universidade de São Paulo, USP
    Sala 08, Avenida Luciano Gualberto 315
    16 de março 2020, 15:00 horas
    com os debatedores
    Alexander Yao Cobbinah, USP
    Luciane Scarato, Universidade de Colônia e Mecila/Cebrap


    Sumário do livro
    Em um mundo onde a diferença é muitas vezes vista como uma ameaça ou desafio, o livro explora como as pessoas realmente vivem em sociedades diversas. Baseado numa etnografia a longo prazo de africanos ocidentais, tanto no Senegal como na Espanha, este livro propõe que a convivialidade é um compromisso com a diferença entre etnias, línguas, religiões e práticas.

    Tilmann Heil reúne histórias de longa data, projetos políticos e práticas cotidianas de viver com a diferença. Com foco na vida de bairros em Casamança, Senegal e Catalunha, Espanha - duas regiões igualmente complexas - o livro mostra como os senegaleses negociam e traduzem com habilidade os meandros da diferença e do poder. Nestes mundos africanos e europeus vividos, a convivialidade é sempre temporária e em transformação.

    Este livro oferece uma leitura texturizada, realista, porém esperançosa, da diferença, da mudança social, do poder e do respeito.
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    Researching with Difference

    As a key part of my research for the book Comparing Conviviality, I reflect on the differences between me and my interlocutors, my privilege and the commonalities we identified and challenges we faced. The relations we forged throughout the research process and beyond materialized at the intersection of race, origin, class, world view and outlook, among others.
    Impressions from the presentation and debate of Comparing Conviviality at the Núcleo Interdisciplinar de Estudos Migratórios (NIEM), IPPUR, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, in March 2020.

    The sound at the beginning and end are from ZigFest in 2010 in Ziguinchor, Senegal which I discuss in Chapter 4: Staged and sensous.

    If ever you do not have access to the book through your institution, please get in touch.
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    The birth of a concept

    The book Comparing Conviviality takes the claim to a better knowledge and practice of how to live with difference foreward that Senegalese migrants in Catalonia made. Pursuing such non-hegemonic knowledge during 18-month of multi-sited, ethnographic fieldwork in Casamance, Senegal, and Catalonia, Spain, this quest has led to the formulation of an unstable concept: conviviality.
    Impressions from the presentation and debate of Comparing Conviviality at the Núcleo Interdisciplinar de Estudos Migratórios (NIEM), IPPUR, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, in March 2020.

    The sound at the beginning and end are from ZigFest in 2010 in Ziguinchor, Senegal which I discuss in Chapter 4: Staged and sensous.

    If ever you do not have access to the book through your institution, please get in touch.