Ethnographic Fieldwork
An Anthropological Reader
Blackwell Anthologies in Social and Cultural Anthropology

2. Auflage Dezember 2011
672 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Kurzbeschreibung
This text provides readers with a broad overview of the range and complexity of fieldwork in anthropology. The updated selections offer insight into the ethnographer's experience of gathering and analyzing data, and a richer understanding of the conflicts, hazards and ethical challenges of pursuing fieldwork around the globe. With 16 new articles and completely revised editorial material throughout, this Second Edition includes insights from fieldworkers during earlier periods of the discipline, to the contemporary reflections on engaged anthropological research. It is an essential collection of international readings for the anthropology student and practicing fieldworker.
Newly revised, Ethnographic Fieldwork: An Anthropological Reader Second Edition provides readers with a picture of the breadth, variation, and complexity of fieldwork. The updated selections offer insight into the ethnographer's experience of gathering and analyzing data, and a richer understanding of the conflicts, hazards and ethical challenges of pursuing fieldwork around the globe.
* Offers an international collection of classic and contemporary readings to provide students with a broad understanding of historical, methodological, ethical, reflexive and stylistic issues in fieldwork
* Features 16 new articles and revised part introductions, with additional insights into the experience of conducting ethnographic fieldwork
* Explores the importance of fieldwork practice in achieving the core theoretical and methodological goals of anthropology
* Highlights the personal and professional challenges of field researchers, from issues of professional identity, fieldwork relations, activism, and the conflicts, hazards and ethical concerns of community work.
Editors' Acknowledgments
Acknowledgments to Sources
Fieldwork in Cultural Anthropology: An Introduction
Part I: Beginnings
Part II: Fieldwork Identity
Part III: Fieldwork Relations and Rapport
Part IV: The "Other" Talks Back
Part V: Fieldwork Conflicts, Hazards, and Dangers
Part VI: Fieldwork Ethics
Part VII: Multi-Sited Fieldwork
Part VIII: Sensorial Fieldwork
Part IX: Reflexive Ethnography
Part X: Engaged Fieldwork
Appendix 1: Key Ethnographic, Sociological, Qualitative, and Multidisciplinary Fieldwork Methods Texts
Appendix 2: Edited Cultural Anthropology Volumes on Fieldwork Experiences
Appendix 3: Reflexive Accounts of Fieldwork and Ethnographies Which Include Accounts of Fieldwork
Appendix 4: Leading Cultural Anthropology Fieldwork Methods Texts
Appendix 5: Early and Classic Anthropological Writings on Fieldwork, including Diaries and Letters
Index
Jeffrey A. Sluka is Associate Professor of Social Anthropology at Massey University, New Zealand. He is past Chair of the Association of Social Anthropologists of Aotearoa/New Zealand, a Fellow of the American Anthropological Association, author of Hearts and Minds, Water and Fish: Popular Support for the IRA and INLA in a Northern Irish Ghetto (1989), and editor of Death Squad: The Anthropology of State Terror (2000).