Living the Ethnographic Life
- Dan Rose - University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
Volume:
23
Series:
Qualitative Research Methods
Qualitative Research Methods
October 1990 | 64 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Should we draw the line between going native and rethinking our ethnographic status? Rose goes beyond merely questioning the ethnographic process. Rather, he explores its origins, its current state of affairs, and proposes how ethnography can be a potent "(sub)culture" for conditioning inquiry into culture. He contends that the corporate structure limits the effectiveness of our current research and subsequent insights into the people whom we study. With a radical democratization of knowledge, decolonization of academic thought, and a move beyond abstract relations, Rose urges ethnographers to reevaluate their pursuit of ethnographic knowledge.
Replete with examples from his extensive research and personal experience, Living the Ethnographic Life provides a refreshing outlook and insight into ethnographic study--a valuable resource for anyone with interests in anthropology, sociology, critical and postmodernist theory, and, of course, ethnography.
Form of Life
Editors' Introduction
Acknowledgements
Form of Life
Reversal
Narrative Lives