Lecture 2: Ethnographic Fieldwork Flashcards

1
Q

ethnography

A
  • based on fieldwork and ‘provides an account of a particular community, society, or culture’
  • long-term residence (new language, intimate relationships with people unlike you)
  • works through a series of reversals (F->S S->F)
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2
Q

ethnology

A
  • based on cross-cultural comparison and ‘examines, compares, analyzes, and interprets the results of ethnography
  • more directly compared
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3
Q

Malinowski

A

• Trobriand islands
• western pacific coast of Papua New Guinea
• 1) cut yourself off from your own kind of people
• 2) immerse yourself in the social world you’re
studying
• 1) find patterns, structures, ‘anatomy’ of social life
•2) fill in details of everyday life, ‘imponderabillia’
• 3) collect a set of telling examples, ‘corpus
inscriptionum’
• to ‘grasp the native’s point of view, relation to life, and realize his/her vision of the world’

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4
Q

ethnographer techniques

A

• participant observation, rapport, key cultural consultants
• genealogical method
• ethnographers discover and record connections of
kinship, descent, marriage, using diagrams and
symbols
• life history

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5
Q

Emic

A

• local perspective

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6
Q

Etic

A

• external, more analytical

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7
Q

research models

A
  • problem-oriented
    • investigates one or more specific topic or problem
  • longitudinal
    • long-term study of an area or population
  • team research
  • multi-sited ethnography
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8
Q

informed consent

A

• agreement to take part in research after the people being studied have been informed about the nature and purpose

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9
Q

Dr. Berk

A

• Tasmania, Australia (Hobart)
• ancestors inhabited around 40,000 yrs ago
• at end of the last ice age (12,000 yrs ago) they were
separated from mainland
• considered extinct as of 1876
• demanded federal recognition as aboriginal people in
1970s
• language is English, but different context

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10
Q

Hobart, Tasmania

A

•Dr. Berk conducted
• education programs
• birding
• mittens (shell accumulation from arriving feast)
• public displays
• bushwalking (walabee’s are marsupials)
• shell collection
• exhibition design (tayenebe project- kelp weaved
baskets)
• Palawa Kani and the Value of Language in Aboriginal
Tasmania

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11
Q

qualitative vs quantitative

A

• more depth driven; less focused on data
vs
• number driven science

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12
Q

participant observation

A

•a characteristic ethnographic technique; taking part in the events one is observing

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13
Q

rapport

A

•good, friendly working relationship with the people you are working with (hosts)

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14
Q

genealogical method

A

• ethnographers discover and record connections of
kinship, descent, marriage, using diagrams and
symbols

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15
Q

key cultural consultants

A

• key informants; people who will help teach you; power is associated

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16
Q

life history

A
  • cultural biography looking in depth

* can speak to the culture as a whole

17
Q

forensic anthro

A

•special sub-field of physical anthropology (the study of human remains) that involves applying skeletal analysis and techniques in archaeology to solving criminal cases.

18
Q

longitudinal research

A

•involves repeated observations of the same variables over short or long periods of time

19
Q

problem-oriented research

A

•tries to solve larger social issues

20
Q

multi-sited ethnography

A

•having program with multiple sites

21
Q

team research

A

•teams of scientists working together

22
Q

ethics

A

•anthropologists have a duty to their field of study and must follow code of morals

23
Q

naïve realism

A

•assuming everyone thinks with equality/on the same level on certain social issues/cultures

24
Q

applied anthro

A

• application of anthropological data, perspectives, theory, and methods to identify and assess contemporary social problems

ex: applied medical anthropology