We are very happy to announce that with the start of the academic year, Max Cam is growing. We are welcoming four new postdoctoral affiliates into our network:
1. Dr Kelly Fagan Robinson, Leverhulme Early Career and Isaac Newton Trust Fellowship
Kelly Fagan Robinson is Medical Anthropology Subject Manager and Lecturer on the Health, Medicine and Society MPhil. She earned her PhD from UCL with her (ESRC/AHRC heritage and public policy) research, Looking to Listen, a project which investigated deaf people’s visual-tactile communication resources, and institutional reception of or resistance to deaf-centred practices. This academic year, Robinson will commence a three-year Leverhulme Early Career and Isaac Newton Trust Fellowship project, ‘Communication Faultlines on the Frontlines’. This research will question: what are the limits of communication? by examining transformations in the ways that British people define ‘support’. Concepts of support have shifted significantly in recent years, particularly as Brexit-based political polarity has foregrounded the size and cost of the Social State, and as the UK’s resources have strained under austerity measures, digitisation, the advent of algorithmically-determined eligibility, and COVID19. Robinson’s research aims to deconstruct the constitutive layers that build individual interpretations and articulations of the value of support, along with the implications associated with seeking public resources, more specifically the documented increases in psychic crisis, self-harm, and suicide due to loss of personal dignity. This places Robinson’s research at the crossroads of medical anthropology, semiotics, social policy and ethics, offering a distinct but complementary contribution to research currently being conducted within Max Cam.
2. Dr Juan del Nido, Philomathia ‘Ethics of Technology’ three year postdoc
Based on an ethnographic analysis of how a Buenos Aires’ NGO promotes and brokers the incorporation of Blockchain among public and private stakeholders, my project will examine how technology mediates the imagination of a horizon beyond ethics. Haunted by confirmed or presumed corruption, indolence and what they see as the moral deterioration of the public sphere, certain middle class Argentines see in Blockchain’s technical properties, processes and code the means not to flesh out or embody the ethical but to outright foreclose it, and deviations thereof, as a subject of concern.
Building on recent developments in the anthropology of ethics, political theory and economic reasoning I will be looking at the following questions: What kind of order could lie beyond the ethical? How would it reproduce and sustain itself? How would economic, moral and political categories like efficiency, transparency, equality and freedom, and longstanding cultural patterns like the public vs. private divide, exist in such an order? How do technological affordances mobilize (post-)ethical imaginations?
3. Dr Timothy P.A. Cooper, ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow
Project title: Recitation on the Threshold of Song: Media and Moral Atmosphere in Pakistan
Dr Timothy Cooper obtained his PhD in Anthropology at University College London. Mentored by Professor Joel Robbins, his Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge builds on recently completed doctoral research on the dynamics of technical mediation among traders in a large electronics market in the Pakistani city of Lahore. In these contexts, giving a name to the atmospheric conditions of moral experience helps individuals and collectives make sense of the difficult relationship between technology, piety, and public affect. Otherwise comprised of publication projects, stakeholder engagement, and impact activities, further research conducted as part of the fellowship will build on the above to explore the role thresholds of permissibility play in the circulation of devotional recordings among the minority Shi’a Muslim community in Pakistani Punjab. The research examines the controversies surrounding a new genre of popular recitation known as qasida fouq or qasida bhatti, which has achieved fame and notoriety for the ways in which it continually tests the ethical threshold between religious recitation and secular song.
4. Dr Daniel White, Visiting Scholar in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge.
Daniel White examines the mutual production of emotion, politics and emerging media technologies, with geographic concentrations on Japan and the UK. Currently he is investigating practices of emotion modeling in the development of affect-sensitive software, social robots and artificial emotional intelligence. Through an ongoing project called Model Emotion, he works across disciplines with anthropologists, psychologists, computer scientists and robotics engineers to trace how theoretical models of emotion are built into machines with the capacity to evoke, read or even in a philosophical sense ‘have’ emotion in ways that foster care and wellbeing. Comparing how this process unfolds differently in places like Japan and the UK, he explores how designing robots with emotional intelligence is shifting research agendas within the psychological science of emotion, as well as transforming people’s capacities to relate affectively and ethically with emerging forms of artificial life.