Pre-textual ethnographies : challenging the phenomenological level of anthropological knowledge-making / edited by Tomasz Rakowski and Helena Patzer.
Współtwórca(-y): Rakowski, Tomasz [Editor.] | Patzer, Helena [Editor.].
Wydawca: Canon Pyon Sean Kingston Publishing 2018Opis: X, 243 s. il. ; 25 cm.ISBN: 9781907774478; 1907774475.Tematy: Antropologia - aspekt filozoficzny | FenomenologiaKlasyfikacja Dewey'a: 301.01 Opis skrócony: Anthropologists often have fieldwork experiences that are not explicitly analysed in their writings, though they nevertheless contribute to and shape their ethnographic understandings, and can resonate throughout their work for many years. The task of this volume is precisely to uncover these layers of anthropological knowledge-making. Contributors take on the challenge of reconstructing the ways in which they originally entered the worlds of research subjects - their anthropological Others - by focusing on pre-textual and deeply phenomenological processes of perceiving, noting, listening and sensing. Drawing on a wide range of research experiences - with the Dogon in Mali, immigrant football players in Spain, the Inuit of the Far North, Filipino transnational families, miners in Poland and students in Scotland - this book goes beyond an exploration of the development of increased ethnographic sensitivity towards words or actions. It also commences the foundational project of developing a new language for building anthropological works, one stemming from recurring acts of participation, and rooted primarily in the pre-textual worlds of the tacit, often non-visible, and intense experiences that exceed the limitations of conventional textual accounts.Typ dokumentu | Obecna lokalizacja | Sygnatura | Status | Termin zwrotu | Kod kreskowy |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Książki |
Instytut Etnologii i Antropologii Kulturowej UW
Instytut Etnologii i Antropologii Kulturowej UW |
18094 (Przeglądaj półkę) | Sprawdź dostępność w bibliotece |
Anthropologists often have fieldwork experiences that are not explicitly analysed in their writings, though they nevertheless contribute to and shape their ethnographic understandings, and can resonate throughout their work for many years. The task of this volume is precisely to uncover these layers of anthropological knowledge-making. Contributors take on the challenge of reconstructing the ways in which they originally entered the worlds of research subjects - their anthropological Others - by focusing on pre-textual and deeply phenomenological processes of perceiving, noting, listening and sensing. Drawing on a wide range of research experiences - with the Dogon in Mali, immigrant football players in Spain, the Inuit of the Far North, Filipino transnational families, miners in Poland and students in Scotland - this book goes beyond an exploration of the development of increased ethnographic sensitivity towards words or actions. It also commences the foundational project of developing a new language for building anthropological works, one stemming from recurring acts of participation, and rooted primarily in the pre-textual worlds of the tacit, often non-visible, and intense experiences that exceed the limitations of conventional textual accounts.