View allAll Photos Tagged ResearchMethods

Peter Johns and Robert Hoare light trapping on Kaitorete Spit.

 

20050129_043

 

Photographs taken spring 2009 by flickr user mbrdrck27 as part of the Department of Anthropology's (College of Charleston) Research Methods in Expressive Course taught by Dr. Moore Quinn and Jolanda-Pieta van Arnhem, M.F.A.

The Research Methods for Expressive Culture Course consists of projects and special in-class activities to encourage students to apply specific anthropological methods. Rather than approaching visual anthropology with its usual divide between ‘anthropological content’ and ‘aesthetic composition,’ the course attempts to foster both, pushing an artistic eye toward newly unfolding anthropological concerns.

 

For more great pictures from the College of Charleston Religious Studies Study Abroad program by flickr user mbrdrck27 visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/mbrdrck27/sets/72157621149336313/

 

 

Poecilasthena subpurpureata

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

 

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

Photographs taken spring 2009 by flickr user mbrdrck27 as part of the Department of Anthropology's (College of Charleston) Research Methods in Expressive Course taught by Dr. Moore Quinn and Jolanda-Pieta van Arnhem, M.F.A.

The Research Methods for Expressive Culture Course consists of projects and special in-class activities to encourage students to apply specific anthropological methods. Rather than approaching visual anthropology with its usual divide between ‘anthropological content’ and ‘aesthetic composition,’ the course attempts to foster both, pushing an artistic eye toward newly unfolding anthropological concerns.

 

For more great pictures from the College of Charleston Religious Studies Study Abroad program by flickr user mbrdrck27 visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/mbrdrck27/sets/72157621149336313/

 

 

Photographs taken spring 2009 by flickr user mbrdrck27 as part of the Department of Anthropology's (College of Charleston) Research Methods in Expressive Course taught by Dr. Moore Quinn and Jolanda-Pieta van Arnhem, M.F.A.

The Research Methods for Expressive Culture Course consists of projects and special in-class activities to encourage students to apply specific anthropological methods. Rather than approaching visual anthropology with its usual divide between ‘anthropological content’ and ‘aesthetic composition,’ the course attempts to foster both, pushing an artistic eye toward newly unfolding anthropological concerns.

 

For more great pictures from the College of Charleston Religious Studies Study Abroad program by flickr user mbrdrck27 visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/mbrdrck27/sets/72157621149336313/

 

 

Danielle kick sampling for invertebrates in Deep Creek.

Photographs taken spring 2009 by flickr user mbrdrck27 as part of the Department of Anthropology's (College of Charleston) Research Methods in Expressive Course taught by Dr. Moore Quinn and Jolanda-Pieta van Arnhem, M.F.A.

The Research Methods for Expressive Culture Course consists of projects and special in-class activities to encourage students to apply specific anthropological methods. Rather than approaching visual anthropology with its usual divide between ‘anthropological content’ and ‘aesthetic composition,’ the course attempts to foster both, pushing an artistic eye toward newly unfolding anthropological concerns.

 

For more great pictures from the College of Charleston Religious Studies Study Abroad program by flickr user mbrdrck27 visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/mbrdrck27/sets/72157621149336313/

 

  

That's John Marris lounging in the centre. John is not a moth.

Photographs taken spring 2009 by flickr user mbrdrck27 as part of the Department of Anthropology's (College of Charleston) Research Methods in Expressive Course taught by Dr. Moore Quinn and Jolanda-Pieta van Arnhem, M.F.A.

The Research Methods for Expressive Culture Course consists of projects and special in-class activities to encourage students to apply specific anthropological methods. Rather than approaching visual anthropology with its usual divide between ‘anthropological content’ and ‘aesthetic composition,’ the course attempts to foster both, pushing an artistic eye toward newly unfolding anthropological concerns.

 

For more great pictures from the College of Charleston Religious Studies Study Abroad program by flickr user mbrdrck27 visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/mbrdrck27/sets/72157621149336313/

 

 

Photographs taken spring 2009 by flickr user mbrdrck27 as part of the Department of Anthropology's (College of Charleston) Research Methods in Expressive Course taught by Dr. Moore Quinn and Jolanda-Pieta van Arnhem, M.F.A.

The Research Methods for Expressive Culture Course consists of projects and special in-class activities to encourage students to apply specific anthropological methods. Rather than approaching visual anthropology with its usual divide between ‘anthropological content’ and ‘aesthetic composition,’ the course attempts to foster both, pushing an artistic eye toward newly unfolding anthropological concerns.

 

For more great pictures from the College of Charleston Religious Studies Study Abroad program by flickr user mbrdrck27 visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/mbrdrck27/sets/72157621149336313/

 

 

 

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

 

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

Scoparia minusculalis

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

Photographs taken spring 2009 by flickr user mbrdrck27 as part of the Department of Anthropology's (College of Charleston) Research Methods in Expressive Course taught by Dr. Moore Quinn and Jolanda-Pieta van Arnhem, M.F.A.

The Research Methods for Expressive Culture Course consists of projects and special in-class activities to encourage students to apply specific anthropological methods. Rather than approaching visual anthropology with its usual divide between ‘anthropological content’ and ‘aesthetic composition,’ the course attempts to foster both, pushing an artistic eye toward newly unfolding anthropological concerns.

 

For more great pictures from the College of Charleston Religious Studies Study Abroad program by flickr user mbrdrck27 visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/mbrdrck27/sets/72157621149336313/

 

 

Scoparia minusculalis

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

Photographs taken spring 2009 by flickr user mbrdrck27 as part of the Department of Anthropology's (College of Charleston) Research Methods in Expressive Course taught by Dr. Moore Quinn and Jolanda-Pieta van Arnhem, M.F.A.

The Research Methods for Expressive Culture Course consists of projects and special in-class activities to encourage students to apply specific anthropological methods. Rather than approaching visual anthropology with its usual divide between ‘anthropological content’ and ‘aesthetic composition,’ the course attempts to foster both, pushing an artistic eye toward newly unfolding anthropological concerns.

 

For more great pictures from the College of Charleston Religious Studies Study Abroad program by flickr user mbrdrck27 visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/mbrdrck27/sets/72157621149336313/

 

 

 

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

 

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

 

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

Note the mite on its back.

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

 

One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.

1 3 5 6