tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post2422859128427247443..comments2023-09-23T11:16:00.352+02:00Comments on The Franco-American Flophouse has moved: Research Is Not Just for AcademicsVictoria FERAUGEhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16319699673885400472noreply@blogger.comBlogger9125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post-47436041159229878222017-04-14T03:06:36.713+02:002017-04-14T03:06:36.713+02:00Part II "I tried for weeks to think of a proo...Part II "I tried for weeks to think of a proof and had given up when one morning Hussein came to the house and sat quietly with me under the bougainvillea arbor.<br />He said, “I have been thinking. John Glenn went into outer space in a rocket. Very high. Is that true?<br />“Yes, of course it’s true. In the Friendship 7. He even circled the earth.”<br />Hussein shook his head as if to resettle out-of-place pieces back into their proper slots. “Did he go straight up into the sky? Didn’t he crash into anything?”<br />So that was it! At last I understood Hussein’s model of the universe. A phrase from long ago school days floated into my mind: “the music of the spheres.” Hussein’s community’s cosmology was based on the second century Ptolemaic system. The verse from the Koran, “seven heavens in harmony,” seemed consistent with this view. The system visualized the sun and moon and planets being moved by spheres that rotate around the earth and, in Hussein’s thinking, those spheres had to be substantial physical things to support such weight. Like everyone else, Hussein had read in April 1961 about Yuri Gagarin rocketing into space, but he dismissed the event as unimportant. After all, the Russians were communists and did not believe in business. Besides, who could trust a nation of atheists? Americans, as his fellow Indians confirmed, were a god-fearing people who appreciated businessmen and dealt fairly with them. When Americans launched a rocket that went straight up, unimpeded, far, far above the earth one had to pay attention. This was believable evidence that the sky held no spheres. Hussein would reconsider his cosmology. The American woman might be right after all."Victoria FERAUGEhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16319699673885400472noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post-33924379396537717572017-04-14T03:05:22.988+02:002017-04-14T03:05:22.988+02:00Here is a comment that came to me via email from I...Here is a comment that came to me via email from Iris over at Iris Sans Frontieres. It's too long to fit in one comment so with her permission I am breaking it up into several paragraphs. Here it is Part I:<br /><br />"You ask -- How does one prove beliefs about reality to someone who doesn't already share your beliefs and information. I've been in this situation fairly often. I wrote about one situation that happened in Mogadiscio in 1964. Honestly. This is from my book -- --<br />One argument I thought I had lost irretrievably. I was aware of the Indian men’s traditional thinking but had underestimated just how thoroughly traditional it was. They firmly believed that the sun and stars and the planets, which they could name, revolved around the earth. My attempts to persuade them otherwise were useless. I had only my faith in astronomy to counter their arguments. I could sketch a rough picture of the earth and other planets circling the sun, but I could think of no indisputable evidence to persuade them that my view of reality was the true one.<br />In an earlier argument about the nature of our earth, my view had prevailed. This was a discussion about whether the earth is round or flat. In an Arabic book that their religious leader, the Sayyid, had read to them the earth was described as flat but the men had never heard of anyone falling off. They traveled frequently to Aden, the British port in Yemen, to purchase goods they sold wholesale or in their shops, and they occasionally flew to Nairobi or Karachi. They knew that Somalis went to Italy and foreigners from everywhere were coming to Mogadiscio. The earth seemed to have no end. As we sat in conversation over tea and biscuits, I told them I recalled reading that when one looks out over the ocean and watches a ship approaching from the horizon, the top of the ship comes first into view and then the lower parts, as if the ship were rising toward you. If the earth were flat the entire ship would be visible from the first sighting. They took note and said they would observe for themselves how a ship appears as it approaches from the horizon. They later confirmed that what I had said was true. Clear reasoning and empirical evidence convinced them, after all, that the earth is round.<br />For our argument about the sun and stars and planets, I had no such proof, and the Indian men had all the information they thought they needed. Everyone they knew pictured a stationary earth with the sun and moon and stars in motion around it. When they told the Sayyid in the mosque about our discussion he read them eloquent poetic verses from the Koran about the earth and the sun and moon and stars and seven heavens in harmony. I had no knowledge that could counter poetry with science."Victoria FERAUGEhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16319699673885400472noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post-37752782889670504022017-04-10T01:42:37.815+02:002017-04-10T01:42:37.815+02:00Nezumi-san, It's also worth looking at how th...Nezumi-san, It's also worth looking at how the questions were worded. And were they open or multiple choice. Aso was the language ability self-reported. I realized after I started looking at my data that I should have asked about literacy, for example. A lost opportunity....Victoria FERAUGEhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16319699673885400472noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post-69415624662402025342017-04-09T10:48:59.065+02:002017-04-09T10:48:59.065+02:00Looking again, I see that the page 26 plot is base...Looking again, I see that the page 26 plot is based on people who were searching for housing in the past 5 years, so my thought that the drop off with time in country could be due to people not needing to look for housing any more was wrong. Instead, some kind of effect of acculturation may be at work?<br /><br />Looking more closely at Page 23, I think they accidentally binned that graph along the wrong axis. They are showing the distributions of language abilities among those denied housing, rather than showing the distribution of housing denials as a function of language ability, which would be the more interesting thing to look at, and what I assume they were trying to measure. What they show is not really instructive without knowing what fraction of people at each language ability level were actually looking for housing. Might be worth writing the committee members and asking about the binning on that chart...<br /><br />It might also be worth finding out whether an official translation is planned. Could save some effort and money. They might well want to do so for use at international conferences, for example.<br /><br />Inaka Nezuminoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post-86997253622006610182017-04-09T07:23:53.244+02:002017-04-09T07:23:53.244+02:00Nezumi-san, Oh yeah, Many of the older theories a...Nezumi-san, Oh yeah, Many of the older theories are indeed about economics. Sometimes they are useful, sometimes not so much. I used one called Dual Labor Market Theory in my dissertation and in the context of Anglophones in Japan, I thought it worked. Some of the newer theories are network theory and transnationalism. I used one called migration systems theory which I really like because it looks at both the sending and receiving countries and how links are formed between the two and how people move along with the links. Is it just by chance that there are a lot of Americans in Japan? Highly unlikely. More likely is that there is a system here where people are just one of the many things that go back and forth. Oddly enough war is one way migration systems can be formed. I really want to write a post or paper about it. THE book I would recommend if you want a thorough look at the theories is The Age of Migration (fifth edition) by Castles, Haas and Miller. Cited a lot, and everybody in the field knows it. No Kindle version, alas. The paperback version though is affordable. <br /><br />That survey is something I just have to read. Tell you what, I am going to ask someone I know who is a translator to do the translation into English. A way to send some work (and cash) his way.Victoria FERAUGEhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16319699673885400472noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post-20220014748089581702017-04-09T02:52:30.697+02:002017-04-09T02:52:30.697+02:00Looking at Massey et al., the thing that jumps out...Looking at Massey et al., the thing that jumps out at me is that the theories they summarize are almost entirely based on economics. There does not seem to be much recognition that there can be other motives for migration besides economic ones -- such as your adviser and you have looked at.<br /><br />An interesting data source has come out recently:<br />http://www.moj.go.jp/content/001221782.pdf<br /><br />This is a government-sponsored survey on discrimination as reported by foreigners in Japan. It is actually quite excellent, and interesting. Don't know if an English translation is planned -- let me know if you want help interpreting parts of it.<br /><br />For example, page 25 shows experiences of being denied housing, broken down by nationality. No clear correlation with race (to the extent that nationality can serve as a proxy), though the worst off seem to be Chinese nationals, and the best off UK, but the next best off are South Koreans, and Americans are in the middle of the pack.<br /><br />Page 26 shows clear correlation with time in country, dropping off as people have been here longer (and are perhaps more likely to own their own places, and not be looking to rent anymore?).<br /><br />Page 23 shows breakdowns by language ability. Very fluent people have somewhat less problems than those that are merely functionally fluent, but still have significant problems. Interestingly, people with almost no Japanese ability report almost no discrimination -- one wonders if they are perhaps simply unaware?<br />Inaka Nezuminoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post-77456006326032621592017-04-09T00:38:07.463+02:002017-04-09T00:38:07.463+02:00Gilbert, Thank *you* for your comment and for wha...Gilbert, Thank *you* for your comment and for what sounds like some good reads. I will pick up The Knowledge Illusion. And if you have any more recommendations, I would love to have them. I confess that I don't understand people who aren't curious. It would be good to understand better why they aren't.<br /><br />Andrew, One of the reasons I enjoyed grad school so much was being around people who regularly challenged each other in a thoughtful way. I really miss that. And I really miss the constant reminders to examine my own biases and to try and put them aside. I am crossing my fingers about my MA because if it goes well then I really want to do a PhD.Victoria FERAUGEhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16319699673885400472noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post-83286656606120473382017-04-08T23:31:33.603+02:002017-04-08T23:31:33.603+02:00Nice! Good to be more mindful of one's assumpt...Nice! Good to be more mindful of one's assumptions and automatic thinking.Andrewhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10191267025812828244noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2424131704277823220.post-5146992400734613082017-04-08T15:14:57.106+02:002017-04-08T15:14:57.106+02:00Good antidote to prejudice and unfounded ranting. ...Good antidote to prejudice and unfounded ranting. Very useful Victoria. Thank you. You have probably seen it, but an interesting book which I am now reading - when I have time - is "The Knowledge Illusion: Why We Never Think Alone"<br />by Steven Sloman and Philip Fernbach. There was an overview in the Financial Times of several books dealing with the general subject of having unfounded strong opinions and not being curious enough to explore. <br />https://www.ft.com/content/af607256-0f1b-11e7-a88c-50ba212dce4d<br />Gilbert (Reid), Toronto, CanadaGilberthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00968432544465212986noreply@blogger.com