It is commonly acknowledged that anthropologists use personal experiences to inform their writing. However, it is often assumed that only fieldwork experiences are relevant and that the personal appears only in the form of self-reflexivity. This book takes a step beyond anthropology at home and auto-ethnography and shows how anthropologists can include their memories and experiences as ethnographic data in their writing. It discusses issues such as authenticity, translation and ethics in relation to the self, and offers a new perspective on doing ethnographic fieldwork.
Tabella dei contenuti
Prologue
Peter Collins and Anselma Gallinat
Chapter 1. The Ethnographic Self as Resource: an Introduction
Peter Collins and Anselma Gallinat
PART I: BEING SELF AND OTHER: ANTHROPOLOGISTS AT HOME
Chapter 2. Playing the Native Card: the Anthropologist as Informant in Eastern Germany
Anselma Gallinat
Chapter 3. Foregroundingthe Self in Fieldwork among Rural Women in Croatia
Lynette Sikic-Micanovic
Chapter 4. Some Reflections on the ‘Enchantments’ of Village Life, or Whose Story is This?
Anne Kathrine Larsen
Chapter 5. The Ethics of Participant Observation: Personal Reflections on Fieldwork in England
Nigel Rapport
PART II: WORKING ON/WITH/THROUGH MEMORY
Chapter 6. Ethnographers as Language Learners: From Oblivion and Towards an Echo
Alison Phipps
Chapter 7. Leading Questions and Body Memories: a Case of Phenomenology and Physical Ethnography in the Dance Interview
Jonathan Skinner
Chapter 8. Dualling Memories: Twinship and the Disembodiment of Identity
Dona Lee Davis and Dorothy I. Davis
Chapter 9. Remembering and the Ethnography of Children’s Sports
Noel Dyck
Chapter 10. Gardening in Time: Happiness and Memory in American Horticulture
Jane Nadel-Klein
PART III: ETHNOGRAPHIC SELVES THROUGH TIME
Chapter 11. The Role of Serendipity and Memory in Experiencing Fields
Tamara Kohn
Chapter 12. Serendipities, Uncertainties and Improvisations in Movement and Migration
Vered Amit
Chapter 13. On Remembering and Forgetting in Writing and Fieldwork
Simon Coleman
Chapter 14. The Ethnographic Self as Resource?
Peter Collins
Chapter 15. Epilogue: What a Story we Anthropolgists Have to Tell!
James W. Fernandez
Notes on Contributors
Index
Circa l’autore
Anselma Gallinat received a Ph D in Social Anthropology from the University of Durham in 2002 and has worked as a Research Assistant and Associate on applied projects. She is currently a Reader in Social Anthropology at Newcastle University (UK). She has worked on questions of sociocultural change, narrative, identity, and most recently memory and morality in eastern Germany.