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This book reflects on the contemporary use of ethnography across both social and natural sciences, focusing in particular on organizational ethnography, autoethnography, and the role of storytelling. The chapters interrogate and reframe longstanding ethnographic discussions, including those concerning reflexivity and positionality, while exploring evolving themes such as the experiential use of technologies. The open and honest accounts presented in the volume explore the perennial anxieties, doubts and uncertainties of ethnography. Rather than seek ways to mitigate these inconvenient but inevitable aspects of academic research, the book instead finds significant value to these experiences.?
Taking the position that collections of ethnographic work are better presented as transdisciplinary bricolage rather than as discipline-specific series, each chapter in the collection begins with a reflection on the existing impact and character of ethnographic research within the authors native discipline. The book will appeal to all academic researchers with an interest in qualitative methods, as well as to advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students.
Chapter 1. Introduction; Tom Vine, Jessica Clark, Sarah Richards & David Weir.- Chapter 2. Home-grown Exoticism? Identity Tales from a New Age Intentional Community; Tom Vine.- Chapter 3. Wrestling with Online Avatars: Technology and Sexual Transformation; Paul Driscoll-Evans.- Chapter 4. Ch?ng ?r fi: Cultural Performances of Belonging in Intercountry Adoptive Families; Sarah Richards.- Chapter 5. Ethnographic Practices of Listening; Allison Boggis.- Chapter 6. Discussion and Collaboration in Diagnostic Radiography; Ruth Strudwick.- Chapter 7. Living with Uncertainty: The Ethnographers Burden; Steve Barnes.- Chapter 8. Managing Dissonance in Identity Construction; Derek Shaw.- Chapter 9. What Makes the Autoethnographic Analysis Authentic?; David Weir & Daniel Clarke.- Chapter l£3Copyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell