Monday, June 30, 2014

Anthropologist Ann Dunham, Mother of the Movement: Obama's Mama

By Charlie Brown

                                                                      Ann Dunham in 1960
I studied anthropology in college undergrad and graduate school, almost pursuing an academic career in anthropology. Recently some forty years after I got my degrees in anthro, I had the opportunity to teach the subject at Wayne County Community College District. It was a sort of blast from the past for me personally. Anthropology is something of its own world, a kinship group of a sort, a scientific community.

So, I have always been proud of the fact that President Barack Obama's mother was an anthropologist, Dr. Ann Dunham  !

And , my bet is that, ANTHROPOLOGY and its theory, through Dr. Dunham,  have had an impact in making a person who is a great leader of the Movement, Barack Obama. Surely, President Obama's ability to relate well to so many different types of people, different ethnic and cultural groups, is learned in part from his mother who  was an ethnologist or cultural anthropologist ( like me; smiles)


" In an interview, Barack Obama referred to his mother as "the dominant figure in my formative years ... The values she taught me continue to be my touchstone when it comes to how I go about the world of politics."
 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Dunham)

I rest my case. 

We might say Ann Dunham is the Mama of Obamaism, a very important political movement of our time, the biggest of the present moment. 


Given the impact that the Individual ,Barack Hussein Obama, has had on the extremely difficult struggle to reverse Reaganism, the central political movement of this moment, verily I say unto you, Dr.  Ann Dunham is a Mother of the Movement .

But even more: Dr. Dunham was an organizer to fight  poverty in Indonesia and Pakistan:

 "To address the problem of poverty in rural villages, she created microcredit programs while working as a consultant for the United States Agency for International Development. Dunham was also employed by the Ford Foundation in Jakarta and she consulted with the Asian Development Bank in Gujranwala, Pakistan. Towards the latter part of her life, she worked with Bank Rakyat Indonesia, where she helped apply her research to the largest microfinance program in the world.[4]"

                                                 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Dunham

We know where Barack Obama got his inspiration to be a community organizer in the years before he ran for office.







"Stanley Ann Dunham (November 29, 1942 – November 7, 1995), the mother of Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States, was an American anthropologist who specialized in economic anthropology and rural development. Dunham was known as Stanley Dunham through high school, then as Ann Dunham, Ann Obama, Ann Soetoro, Ann Sutoro (after her second divorce), and finally as Ann Dunham.[1] Born in Wichita, Kansas, Dunham spent her childhood in California, Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas, her teenage years in Mercer Island, Washington, and most of her adult life in Hawaii and Indonesia.[2]

 Dunham studied at the East–West Center and at the University of Hawaii at Manoa in Honolulu, where she attained a bachelor's in anthropology or mathematics[3] and master's and Ph.D. in anthropology.[4] Interested in craftsmanship, weaving and the role of women in cottage industries, Dunham's research focused on women's work on the island of Java and blacksmithing in Indonesia.


After her son assumed the presidency, interest renewed in Dunham's work: The University of Hawaii held a symposium about her research; an exhibition of Dunham's Indonesian batik textile collection toured the United States; and in December 2009, Duke University Press published Surviving against the Odds: Village Industry in Indonesia, a book based on Dunham's original 1992 dissertation. Janny Scott, an author and former New York Times reporter, published a biography about Ann Dunham's life titled A Singular Woman in 2011. Posthumous interest has also led to the creation of The Ann Dunham Soetoro Endowment in the Anthropology Department at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, as well as the Ann Dunham Soetoro Graduate Fellowships, intended to fund students associated with the East–West Center (EWC) in Honolulu, Hawaii.[5]

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Dunham

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