On Surveillance - with Katherine Verdery
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In this episode, On Surveillance, our guest is Katherine Verdery, Julien J. Studley Faculty Scholar and Distinguished Professor Emerita at the Department of Anthropology at the City University of New York. Her research has explored a vast set of topics, from property relations in agriculture and the political economy of social inequality and ethnic ties to the socialist and post-socialist politics of culture and regimes of governance, secrecy, and surveillance.   Verdery`s book, My Life as a Spy: Investigations in a Secret Police File (2018), which won the Victor Turner Prize in Ethnographic Writing, explores new ways to think about the relationship between surveillance, governance, and state power today.     Some of Verdery`s other publications include What Was Socialism and What Comes Next? (1996), The Political Lives of Dead Bodies (1999), The Vanishing Hectare: Property and Value in Postsocialist Transylvania (2003) and Secrets and Truths: Ethnography in the Archive of Romania’s Secret Police (2014).   Host: George Paul Meiu, Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Basel. Production:  Zainabu Jallo, Ann Karimi Kern (Institute of Social Anthropology) in collaboration with the New Media Center at the University of Basel
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