Snippets

29 October 2008, 10:57

I often have little moments that I think people would enjoy hearing about, but it’s hard to compose a whole article about them. So I’m going to try to remember a few, and just put them here in no particular order, with no particular theme.

1. The other day I got off the taxi at a different place and explored a new route to the internet cafe, because I now know so many vendors on my regular route that it adds between 10 and 40 minutes to my walk just to greet everybody properly.

1. a) I’ve come to a new appreciation of celebrity public meltdowns, particularly violence towards photographers and aggressive fans. For myself, I find it hard to ignore people who speak to me because it seems very rude, but on the other hand it can be exhausting, and sometimes it is not at all rewarding (for instance, I once told some people that I couldn’t stop because I was meeting a friend, they asked man or woman, and I said man, and then they made some rude comment about me meeting him for sex.) Sometimes you’re having a really bad day, and you just want a few minutes to collect yourself but there’s someone who keeps pressing even when you’ve done the polite “I’m not interested” thing. And sometime, on those day, sometimes, you just loose it and find yourself yelling at a beggar to “Go!!!! AWAY!!!!!!” And then you find yourself with a new appreciation for people who punch cameramen.

2. You can buy really cheap movie and tv collections here. They come in a shiny box with collages representing the collection and a nifty copyright notification assuring you that they have permission to distribute these movies but you, the buyer, do not. They are low res and the tv shows often have a television stations water mark on them (I get the biggest kick out of watching tv programs with “Global” or “Citytv” on them). But the funniest thing about these collections is the bizzaro titles and themes they have. There are a number of “vs.” collections. I recently purchased “Jennifer Lopez vs. Kate Winslet”, basically a collection of about 20 movies, 10 each “staring” one or the other (“staring” is a stretch for some of the movies). I wish I could remember some of the more bizarre titles. I will keep my eye out and write them down next time, I promise.

3. Incongruous t-shirts are a constant source of private amusement and/or speculation to me. Did the mayoral candidate in Iowa ever envision his campaign t-shirt on a woman in Africa carrying yams-for-sale on her head? Does that respectable teacher and father of four know who “Black Sabbath” is?

3. a) I don’t want to make fun of people wearing incongruous t-shirts, because they’re pretty much seen as work clothes that can be worn until they’re too grubby and then turned to rags. So it’s a private amusement, just a humourous note to myself that I exist in two different contexts. But then I occasionally see something incongruous on a child, one of those overly sexual slogans we’ve taken to putting on children. I find these distressing, not because of the context here; I think most people are indifferent to t-shirt slogans and even literate people may see them more as designs than messages. But the incongruity of seeing a man wearing a pink “Princess” t-shirt is one of cross-culture context. That type of incongruity highlights the fact that the incongruity of a 7-year-old child wearing a t-shirt with large block letters saying “SED/UCT/ION” is a purposeful one that was intended, and that people bought into in the first place. I’ve always found it distasteful, but somehow seeing it in this context, it seemed more profoundly disturbing. I suppose because it seems that the people who made and bought these shirts for children were using the children to create their own private amusement, similar to the one I feel looking at recycles, out of context slogans.

Well, that’s all for now. I’ll try to think of more.

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Should I stay or should I go, now?

24 October 2008, 09:51

Well, that was awesome! Finding five comments the day after a 100+ day absence was a nice feeling :)

Lenore asked if I’m considering staying (or rather, coming back). Here’s the sitch: between all the sicks I’ve lost about 3-4 months to lying in bed. Does that ever suck! Anyway, when all’s said and done, this has had a negative impact on my fieldwork. So, I’m considering extending my time here. Since my ticket expires in Dec, I’ll come home anyway, for a much needed break. But I am leaning strongly towards returning in January for about 4 months.

I kind of come and go on this. Before the very last sick, I was in a really great fieldwork groove, but I’ve kind of fallen out of the groove and it’s starting to feel like maybe an extra four months won’t be that great. But on the other hand, I now know so many more people and thing are going really well, and I’m sure that I could get a lot more done by extending my time here.

The decision that I have pretty much come to at this point is that I will work on writing my research up over the next three-four months, so that I can identify the gaps that I see. That should allow me to set some goals for my return trip. Then I will give myself the option of coming home early if those goals are met. That should help to stave off procrastination, both now and then: I’m not just waiting out a period of time before I can go home, I’m working towards a flexible endpoint based on my productivity. That sounds way more corporate than I mean, but I bet you get the picture.

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Update

23 October 2008, 04:50

I’ve been lax, I know. Remiss even. I wonder if anybody even checks the blog anymore. I wouldn’t blame you if you didn’t, although you’d never know.

A lot has happened. I was sick, then better, then sick, then better, then sick, then sicker, then really really sick, then a little better, then a little sick, then mostly better, then better, then sick, now mostly better. I now am the same weight that I was when I was 13.

Somewhere between a little sick and mostly better I moved from the house where I was living to a non-Ghanaian household consisting of a Norwegian girl I’ve become friends with and the child she is in the process of adopting. It’s great fun living with them, her child is a great lover of life, and is at a stage where her favourite forms of interaction are hugs and kisses. Regular hugs and kisses are very nice when living far from the people you love.

My research has not progressed as much as I would have hoped, given all the sickness, but it has progressed. I am better at interviewing now, and I have had the chance to sit in not just at funerals, but at the meetings before and afterward where much of the decision-making that I’m interested in happens. I’ve met a number of people who have given me really great and interesting information, and been very generous in their participation in my project.

The longer I stay here, the more this is just a place where I live. The quirks and funny moments that lend themselves to blogging start to fade away into ordinariness, and I am left walking down a dirt road next to a corn field, listening to the birds, insects, and traffic, with the sun beating on my head and the occasional passer-by carrying a load on her head, feeling a profound sense of ordinary. In many ways this is a good thing, it certainly is more comfortable to live in an ordinary place than a strange one. But it has the affect of making me feel like I have nothing to say, something which has unfortunately affected my research notes as well as my blog (although not nearly as badly, if my adviser is readin :) )

Anyway, I’m going to try to make more of an effort with the blog again, because I’ve started drafting my thesis, and it’s made me realize that I still have lots to say. Also, I miss talking to people, and I’m hoping that more activity will inspire both comments and emails.

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Still Alive!

8 July 2008, 06:08

Sorry that I haven’t updated in so long. Things occur to me, but in a passing way, and I find that I often don’t have time to update when I’m actually on the internet (or the link is too slow, or whatever).

The research is progressing, and although things are difficult, I’m hanging in here. Clvrmnky is coming for a visit in August, and I am very much looking forward to that.

I will try to have more of an update over the next few days. If you are going to send a birthday greeting, don’t send e-cards, because I may not be able to load them up, but an nice chatty email would be most welcome :)

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All roads lead to home

14 May 2008, 07:48

I’m starting to learn my way around Kumasi, which is to say that I am learning routes more than logics. Kumasi is hilly, and the roads twist and wind due to both social and environmental factors. Over the past few weeks I have realized that there are 4 ways to leave my school: left then right; left then left; right then right, and right then left. And I have realized that to get me home, different cab drivers have taken each of these options. Further more, if you go right then left, you get to a traffic circle from which you can take three of the four feeder roads to get to my house. Yes, that’s right, all roads lead to me.

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