Difference between revisions of "User:Jessievarquezjr"
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− | + | [[File:Jessie Varquez Profile Photo.jpg|alt=|thumb|Jessie Varquez]] | |
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{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! scope="row"| Full name | ! scope="row"| Full name | ||
− | | | + | | Jessie Varquez |
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! scope="row" | Institution | ! scope="row" | Institution | ||
− | | | + | | University of Manitoba |
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! scope="row"| Research | ! scope="row"| Research | ||
− | | | + | | Social Wellbeing, Assemblage, and Governmentality of Human-Rabbitfish Relations |
|} | |} | ||
==About me== | ==About me== | ||
− | + | I'm currently a PhD Candidate in anthropology at the University of Manitoba conducting ethnographic fieldwork to investigate human-rabbitfish relations on Bantayan Island in the Central Philippines. | |
==About my research== | ==About my research== | ||
− | + | My research broadly investigates human-rabbitfish relations through the lens of social wellbeing, assemblage, and governmentality. In particular, I look at a dried fish commodity locally called "boneless danggit", which commands a high price and is widely consumed throughout the Philippines, as a reference and vantage point toward understanding the complex issues of coastal ecology, small-scale fisheries, artisanal dried fish making, gender, coastal governance, and other attendant issues and themes on values and power.. | |
==Links== | ==Links== | ||
* [[{{TALKPAGENAME}}|Discussion]] | * [[{{TALKPAGENAME}}|Discussion]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 06:06, 30 January 2024
Full name | Jessie Varquez |
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Institution | University of Manitoba |
Research | Social Wellbeing, Assemblage, and Governmentality of Human-Rabbitfish Relations |
About me
I'm currently a PhD Candidate in anthropology at the University of Manitoba conducting ethnographic fieldwork to investigate human-rabbitfish relations on Bantayan Island in the Central Philippines.
About my research
My research broadly investigates human-rabbitfish relations through the lens of social wellbeing, assemblage, and governmentality. In particular, I look at a dried fish commodity locally called "boneless danggit", which commands a high price and is widely consumed throughout the Philippines, as a reference and vantage point toward understanding the complex issues of coastal ecology, small-scale fisheries, artisanal dried fish making, gender, coastal governance, and other attendant issues and themes on values and power..