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Bringing Fieldwork Back In
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Bringing Fieldwork Back In
Contemporary Urban Ethnographic Research

First Edition
Edited by:


June 2012 | 280 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc

In 2001, the first of a series of ethnographic conferences took place in Los Angeles with an emphasis on fieldwork. Since then the field has gained a much larger disciplinary footprint. While the increase in substantial research in the field has risen dramatically, ethnographic styles of writing have emerged that fail to include much discernible fieldwork. This volume of The Annals broaches the subject of improving fieldwork in the ethnographic spectrum through old-fashioned or "shoe leather" fieldwork. At a more recent ethnographic conference at Yale University in 2010 with a follow-up in June 2011, emerging ethnographers were mentored by senior scholars in whichthey presented an informal, yet supportive setting where ethnographic fieldwork could be constructively critiqued. This volume is a product of those collective efforts. The articles in this volume include insight into relations among affluent minorities, the status system we find in today'ssports, and a portrait of an employer of undocumented workers, among other articles. This volume will appeal to both undergraduate and graduate students with a wide range of interests including sociology, education, anthropology, and race and gender conflicts and problems.


Elijah Anderson
The Iconic Ghetto
Elijah Anderson, Duke W. Austin, Vani S. Kulkarni, and Craig Holloway
The Legacy of Racial Caste
Saida Grundy
Manhood in the Margins: Culture, Crisis, and Masculinity in the Making of Middle-Class Black Men
Brandon A. Jackson
The Bonds of Brotherhood: Emotional and Social Support among College Black Men
Vida Bajc
Ethnography of Emergent Practice in Highly Uncertain Conditions
Scott N. Brooks
“Scrub”: Using Multi–Site Analysis to Analyze the Status System among Basketball Players
Michael F. DeLand
Suspending Narrative Engagements: The Case of Pick–up Basketball
Nikki Jones and Geoffrey Robinson
“The Camera Rolls”: Using Third-Party Video in Field Research
Waverly Duck
An Ethnographic Portrait of a Precarious Life
Jacob Avery
Down and Out in Atlantic City
Vani S. Kulkarni
The Making and Unmaking of Local Democracy in an Indian Village
Esther Chihye Kim
“Call me Mama”: An Ethnographic Portrait of an Employer of Undocumented Workers
Martina Cvajner
The Presentation of Self in Emigration: Eastern European Women in Italy
Betty L. McCall
Influx: Black Urban Women’s Migration to Rural Pennsylvania
Alexandra K. Murphy
“Litterers”: How Physical Disorder Is Used to Construct Social Disorder in a Poor Suburb
Brandon Berry
Reflections of Self from Missing Things: How People Move On from Losing Possessions
Jooyoung Lee
Wounded: Life After the Shooting

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