The architecture of Angkor (in Cambodia, the seat of the Khmer empire from the 9th to 14th centuries) reflects the unique sophistication of the Khmer culture. For example, there are the “elephant gates” of Angkor Wat, the main temple of Angkor, which are built to accommodate royalty that traveled on… well… elephants. […]
Entries Tagged as 'Anthropology'
Cambodia Transport Tech: Elephants and Motorcycles
February 5th, 2008 · No Comments
Tags: Anthropology · Archaeology · Cambodia · Uncategorized
All World’s Internet Users Aren’t American
February 4th, 2008 · 1 Comment
One of Intel’s anthropologists, Genevieve Bell, gave the keynote speech at the Australasian Computer Science Conference last year. After the conference, she was asked if it would be fair to characterize her job as reminding American technology experts that all Internet users aren’t Americans. Her frank reply:
“[T]hat’s certainly one way of thinking about […]
Tags: Anthropology · Asia · Australia · Ghana · Indonesia · Malaysia · Middle East · Mobile · U.S.
Zeitgeist - International Edition
January 1st, 2008 · 1 Comment
I’m bored with Google’s U.S. year-end “zeitgeists” (no surprise that Paris Hilton is still a top search term in 2007) — but there are still some interesting tidbits in Google’s monthly Zeitgeist Around the World, which lists the top-gaining search queries in various countries around the world.
The results can be quirky and interesting. For […]
Tags: Anthropology · Brazil · China · Fun · Norway · Russia
Irish Mounds Brewed Ancient Ale?
December 17th, 2007 · No Comments
Archaeologists Billy Quinn and Declan Moore are getting a lot of press for their new theory about the famous burnt mounds of Ireland (there called the fulacht fiadh), which date back as far as 2500 BC.
Quinn believes the mounds may be the nation’s oldest breweries, designed in an age before metalworking allowed the creation of […]
Tags: Anthropology · Archaeology · Europe · Fun
Now you can quantify stereotypes…
January 17th, 2006 · No Comments
Is Cultural Anthropology nothing more than legitmized stereotyping? I don’t really think so, but now we can test that hypothesis. The Prejudice Map uses Google results to determine common sterotypes held about nationalities world-wide.
Interestingly, bloggers are known for “expressing strong opinions succinctly,” “expressing strong political views,” and “their virility.”
Tags: Anthropology · Politics









