[Linganth] new podcast episode! "Is Talk Cheap? Language and Value: A Conversation with Jillian Cavanaugh"

Graber, Kathryn E. graberk at iu.edu
Tue Nov 5 15:38:52 UTC 2024


Greetings all,

Looking for a podcast to listen to this Election Day?

Fresh out in the Mergers & Acquisitions podcast series is the first installment of Is Talk Cheap? For the next three months, PhD student Ariana Gunderson and I are bringing economic anthropology and linguistic anthropology together to explore language and value. We are hosting interviews with anthropologists thinking critically about qualia, evaluation, authenticity, and circulation, tracing the ways that value is semiotically negotiated and constructed.

In this first episode, we talk with Jillian Cavanaugh about all things language and value, from the northern Italian labor market to how the sausage is made (I don't mean that metaphorically). Check it out here!

https://econanthro.org/podcasts/is-talk-cheap-language-and-value-a-conversation-with-jillian-cavanaugh/

Mergers and Acquisitions is a podcast of the Society for Economic Anthropology, produced in collaboration with the American Anthropological Association. We feature quarterly thematic collections on topics that range from climate change and digital capitalism to entrepreneurship, waste, and energy.


Be sure to subscribe so you catch the second and third installments in this series-

December 1: Is Talk Cheap? Making Palm Oil "Sustainable" with Montserrat Perez Castro
January 1: Is Talk Cheap? Language, Tourism, and Landscape with Thea Strand

Best wishes,

Kate


Kathryn E. Graber
Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology<https://anthropology.indiana.edu/about/faculty/graber-kathryn.html> and Department of Central Eurasian Studies<https://ceus.indiana.edu/people/current-faculty/graber-kathryn.html>
Co-Director, Qualitative Data Analysis Lab<https://ssrc.indiana.edu/facilities/quallab/index.html>
Indiana University
Member at Large, Society for Linguistic Anthropology (2023-2026)
publications: Mixed Messages<https://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/9781501750519/mixed-messages/> | Storytelling as Narrative Practice<https://brill.com/display/title/38668?language=en> | downloadable things<https://indiana.academia.edu/KathrynGraber>
I wish to acknowledge and honor the myaamiaki, Lënape, Bodwéwadmik, and saawanwa people, on whose ancestral homelands and resources Indiana University Bloomington is built.
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