MA, MPhil, PhD
Senior Lecturer
- About
-
- Email Address
- t.argounova-low@abdn.ac.uk
- Telephone Number
- +44 (0)1224 273591
- Office Address
G15, Edward Wright Building Department of Anthropology University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB24 3QY, UK
- School/Department
- School of Social Science
Biography
MA Linguistics, Yakutsk University, Russia
MPhil, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
PhD, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Qualifications
- MA Languages1986 - Yakutsk University
- MPhil Anthropology1995 - University of Cambridge
- PhD Anthropology2001 - University of Cambridge
Internal Memberships
Head of Department
Anthropology Society Liaison Staff Rep
School Equality & Diversity Committee
School Teaching and Learning Committee
School Postgraduate Committee
- Research
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Research Overview
Themes: roads, narratives and roads, movement, mobility, migration, long-distance driving, winter roads, drifting
Regional: North, Russian North, Siberia, Sakha, Yakutia, Evenki, reindeer herding communities
Current Research
Roads and narratives:
This project approaches roads as social phenomenon that offer economic and social opportunities. People travel along roads for work and leisure and each road and each journey can be narrated. In this project I investigate the relationship between roads and narratives.Long-distance driving:
Much driving in the North happens on winter roads that exist only for a short period of time. These roads are difficult and treacherous, always fluctuating, always changing. This project studies the work of truckers who drive long distances to deliver goods to the northern settlements of Sakha (Yakutiia). I investigate the concept of road as experienced by these road-users. The project focuses on drivers' navigation and driving skills, knowledge of routes, and engagement with the road.
Driving and drifting in urban space:
This project is based on study of driving practices in the city of Yakutsk, north-eastern Siberia. I investigate the spatial concept of road through performance of driving and various practices that road-users employ in the city. The project studies emerging car-cultures in post-socialist environment with its car fetishism and appreciation of speed and mobility. The project focuses on use of cars, street games, racing, and notions of risk. The project discusses the post-Soviet production of space where cars, money, and speed are important elements for expression of individual freedom.
Funding and Grants
Leverhulme Special Research Fellowship (2003-2005) "Indigenous and Diaspora Identities in Post Soviet Siberia"
British Academy Small Research Grants (2004-2005) "Remembering Lost Connections: the Past and Present of Two Native Siberian Villages"
- Teaching
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Teaching Responsibilities
AT4026 Roads: Mobility, Movement, Migration
AT4009 Anthropology of the North
AT1501 Introduction to Anthropology
AT2010 Key Debates in Anthropology
SL3504 Global Challenges
AT5029 Supervised Reading
AT5531 Research in Social Anthropology