Adam Grydehøj
banner
grydehoj.com
Adam Grydehøj
@grydehoj.com
840 followers 1.2K following 20 posts
Geography, Folklore, Island Studies. Professor, South China University of Technology. Currently studying spatialisations of deity worship in Guangdong, which is absolutely a real job. Editor of 'Folk, Knowledge, Place'. https://grydehoj.com
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Conference announcement: 'Supernatural animals, mystical beasts, and uncanny creatures: Folklore in place', 9-13 November 2026, Guangzhou, China
-Deadline for abstracts: 28 February 2026-
folkknowledgeplace.org/post/3461-su...
#folklore #animals #China #legends #myths
New article: 'Ritual labour and maintenance of tradition in a village temple: An occupational folklore approach to Chinese religion', published with Qi Pan in 'Folklore: Electronic Journal of Folklore'.

#folklore #China

folklore.ee/folklore/vol...
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
Conference call for papers: 'Knowing place through film and audiovisual media', 9-12 February 2026, Alta, Norway
Academic conference on how films, series, and other audiovisual media and arts serve to represent, imagine, understand, and produce place and home.
folkknowledgeplace.org/post/3087-kn...
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
New 'Island Studies Journal' article:
'If Islands Did Not Exist, It Would Be Necessary to Invent Them: Grappling with Divergent Ascriptions of Islandness in Island Studies'
By Adam Grydehøj, Ping Su, Ulunnguaq Markussen, & Asinate Mausio
islandstudiesjournal.org/article/137602
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
Island Studies Journal celebrates its first two decades with the publication of Volume 20, Issue 1. This issue consists of 13 articles on islands in Asia, Europe, North America, and the Atlantic, including a special section on 'Islands in speculative fiction'. islandstudiesjournal.org/issue/12263
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
this is amazing. just came across the Xinsheng project, an initiative by 1.5 gen Chinese Americans and college students to counter right-wing misinformation rampant on WeChat.
www.xinshengproject.org/about
Blue Humanities has just launched: bluehumanitiesjournal.org. Studies of oceans, rivers, lakes, and other aquatic spaces. This peer reviewed, non-fee charging open access journal has its intellectual roots in Asia’s long tradition of thinking with water and has its editorial office is in Hangzhou.
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
I'm teaching a class on Jews and the problems of racialization next year, and I'm realizing that I'm going to have to teach these two Elon Musk tweets juxtaposed to each other.
Elon Musk, 2023: "Jews push 'hatred against whites.'"

Elon Musk yesterday, 2025: "Jews are 'peak white.'"

For a white nationalist like Musk, Jews are both the most and the least white, depending on what political purpose you need them to serve.
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
New 'Island Studies Journal' article:
'Understanding Islandness Effects through the Challenges of Water Infrastructure: A Case Study on the Kinmen Islands'
By Mei-Huan Chen
doi.org/10.24043/001...
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
New 'Island Studies Journal' article:
'Economic Globalisation and the Islands of the Indian Ocean: An Econometric Analysis'
By Zafiira BeeharryYaşam Demir
islandstudiesjournal.org/article/1259...
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
Beewolf Press is launching the diamond open access journal 'Blue Humanities' in 2026. With its roots in Asia and its editorial office in Hangzhou, the journal is dedicated to critical studies of marine, river, lake, wetland, and other water-related environments.
More information coming soon!
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
Reviewing academic texts, I find myself repeating a mantra.
So here is for everyone, what my (PhD) students get to hear:
1) think of your reader
2) demonstrate first, then declare
3) use active language
4) write short sentences
4) treat humans - including yourself - not as actors

#anthropology
"Think of the reader." The absolutely crucial point that so many scholars at all levels miss. It doesn't matter how brilliant your ideas are if readers are too bored to finish the paper or too confused to understand it.
'Hao Dong Xi' (2024), a comedy about being a middle class, divorced mother (and other forms of womanhood) in urban China. Society sets women impossible standards, and knowing this doesn't mean knowing how to fix it. The lesson: You don't need to be perfect to be OK. www.imdb.com/title/tt3180...
Her Story (2024) ⭐ 8.0 | Comedy, Drama, Romance
2h 3m
www.imdb.com
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
New article in 'Folk, Knowledge, Place':
'"I have become a warrior in the Xiang Army" : Legacies, nostalgia, and identity in Chinese regional hip-hop'
By Xihuan Hu

folkknowledgeplace.org/article/1270...
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
New 'Folk, Knowledge, Place' article:
'Down with the tide: How wilderness and islandness are represented in two novels from Ireland and Iceland'
By Chiara Mastronardo
folkknowledgeplace.org/article/1270...
In 'Encountering folk, knowledge, and place', Yaso Nadarajah and I introduce our motivations for and the background of this new, and radically open, journal project: seeking new ways of knowing in the pluriverse. doi.org/10.24043/001...
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
New article in 'Folk, Knowledge, Place':
'Belonging to the land: Indigenous Māori narratives of home and place'
By Cinnamon Lindsay-Latimer, Tanya Allport, Mel Potaka-Osborne, & Denise Wilson
folkknowledgeplace.org/article/1257...
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
'Island Studies Journal', Volume 19, Issue 2 has just been published: islandstudiesjournal.org/issue/11123
15 papers on islands around the world, including special sections on 'Island transport challenges' and 'Policy-oriented research and island management'.
I have visited similar places, including one very grim example in Pingtan. This kind of speculative tourism development continues, and it points to deep flaws in project conceptualisation and financial management. We need research-led tourism policy.
www.sixthtone.com/news/1016241
They Built an Entire ‘Ancient Town.’ Practically Nobody Came.
The vast Dayong Town complex cost over $300 million to build, but only receives about 20 visitors per day.
www.sixthtone.com
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
New 'Island Studies Journal' article:
'Insular Perspectives of the State: Territorial Policy and Management as Seen From Guaitecas'
By Álvaro Román, Katherine Bassaletti, & Javiera Larraín
doi.org/10.24043/001...

Guaitecas, islandness, Chile, local politics, centre-periphery dynamics, #islands
Reposted by Adam Grydehøj
More context for the Flann O'Brien quote from The Third Policeman (1967) that I've been using as a metaphor for how we can perceive the heinous attacks on trans rights, and how cis folks and others might not understand how not only will their rights also be violated, *it's already happening*