âWhat doesnât count as scholarship?â asked in ¶¶Òőappâs 2021 Sachs Lecture. The answer, said Jackson, Walter H. Annenberg Dean of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, bears on âhow we bring truth and fact to bear on arguments we make about the world.â
Jackson aspired to a Hollywood career but became an anthropologist to honor âthe power of images and soundâ by making ethnographic films. The academy fought him, signaling that movies âwerenât going to count at promotion as much as a book or an article.â
Watch the 2021 Sachs Lecture, delivered by John L. Jackson, Jr.
That unwritten rule, he said, stems from the anthropologist Clifford Geertzâs âcanonizationâ of ââthin descriptionâ â the inadequacy of merely looking at the physical worldâ because âyou need the anthropological guide to walk you throughâŠwhat youâre only seeing.â
Iâd argue that part of what makes the moving image so difficult and dangerous to comprehend is itâs thickness, not itâs thinness.
âTC Sachs Lecturer John L. Jackson, Jr.
But âIâd argue that part of what makes the moving image so difficult and dangerous to comprehend is itâs thickness, not itâs thinness,â said Jackson, whose own films include âBad Friday: Rastafari After Coral Gardens,â a documentary on the 1963 violence in a Western Jamaican Rasta community, and who created a student âbootcampâ to âroutinize what it would mean to pick up and turn on and mobilize a camera.â
John L. Jackson, Jr., Walter H. Annenberg Dean of the Annenberg School for Communication and Richard Perry University Professor at the University of Pennsylvania
Anthropology â and academia in general â will surely have a âmulti-modal future,â Jackson concluded. But âthe question becomes, Do we enter kicking and screaming? Or, do we enter with a game plan to prepare students in education, anthropology, sociology and communication with the tools they need, the skills and sensibilities to bring to bear on a multimodal world?â
The Sachs Lecture, sponsored by TCâs Office of the Provost, was established in 1924 by Julius Sachs, a TC faculty member who founded New York Cityâs Dwight School.