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Transcript
Chapter 3
Ethnographic Research:
Its History, Methods,
and Theories
Thursday 9/26/2013
OBJ: SWBAT understand the difference
between Acculturation and Assimilation.
• Drill: What is Ethnographic Research? Why
is it important to Anthropology
• Homework:
•
•
http://www.pbs.org/pov/woainimommy/lesson
_plan.php
Answer:
•
Ethnography is the study of people and their
cultures. Ethnographic research involves
observation of and interactions with the
people or group being studied in the group’s
own environment, often for long periods of
time
How and Why Did
Ethnographic Research
Evolve?
In the early years of the discipline, many
anthropologists documented traditional
cultures they assumed would disappear due.
• After the colonial era ended in the 1960s,
anthropologists established a code of ethics
to ensure their research does not harm the
groups they study.
•
What Are Ethnographic
Research Methods?
Although anthropology relies on various
research methods, its hallmark is extended
fieldwork in a particular cultural group.
• Fieldwork features participant observation in
which the researcher observes and
participates in the daily life of the community
being studied.
•
How Is Research Related to
Theory?
Data resulting from research provide
anthropologists with material needed to
produce a comprehensive ethnography.
• Theories help us frame new questions that
deepen our understanding of cultural
phenomena.
•
Components of Cultural
Anthropology
Ethnography
– A detailed description of a particular
culture primarily based on fieldwork.
2. Ethnology
– The study and analysis of different
cultures from a comparative point of view.
1.
Urgent Anthropology
Ethnographic research that documents
endangered cultures.
• Also known as salvage ethnography.
•
Acculturation
•
•
Until recently, Ayoreo
Indian bands lived
largely isolated in the
Gran Chaco, a vast
wilderness in South
America’s heartland.
Today, most
dispossessed Ayoreo
Indians find themselves
in different stages of
acculturation.
Assimilation
•
When people of different backgrounds come
to see themselves as part of a larger national
family
Applied Anthropology
•
The use of anthropological knowledge and
methods to solve practical problems in
communities confronting new challenges.
Question
•
The study and analysis of different cultures
from a comparative point of view is called
A. Ethnography
B. Urgent Anthropology
C. Ethnology
D. Applied Anthropology
Answer: C
•
The study and analysis of different cultures
from a comparative point of view is called
ethnology.
Peasant Studies
Peasants represent an important category
between modern industrial society and
traditional subsistence foragers, herders,
farmers, and fishers.
• Peasantry represents the largest social
category of our species so far.
• Because peasant unrest over economic and
social problems fuels political instability
anthropological studies of rural populations
are considered significant and practical.
•
Peasant Studies
•
A peasant leader
addresses a crowd in
front of the presidential
palace in Paraguay’s
capital city Asuncion at
a massive protest rally
against land
dispossession.
Advocacy Anthropology
Anthropologists committed to social justice
and human rights have become actively
involved in efforts to assist indigenous
groups, peasant communities, and ethnic
minorities.
• Most anthropologists committed to community
based and politically involved research refer
to their work as advocacy anthropology.
•
Advocacy Anthropology
•
Today’s most wide
ranging advocacy
anthropologist is
Rodolfo Stavenhagen,
special rapporteur on
indigenous rights for the
United Nations High
Commission on Human
Rights.
Tuesday October 1, 2013
OBJ:SWBAT Understand why Ethnographic
research is important, and how participant
observation works.
• Drill: Why do we study other cultures, why is it
important to do so?
•
Multi-sited Research
•
In her explorations on
Chinese identities in the
context of U.S. and
Chinese racial and
multicultural politics,
anthropologist Andrea
Louie (center) has done
multi-sited research in
St. Louis, San
Francisco, Hong Kong,
and China.
Ethnographic Fieldwork
•
Extended on-location research to gather
detailed and in-depth information on a
society’s customary ideas, values, and
practices through participation in its collective
social life.
Fieldwork
•
Ecologist James Kremer and anthropologist Stephen Lansing
who have researched the traditional rituals and network of water
temples linked to the irrigation management of rice fields on the
island of Bali in Indonesia are explaining a computer simulation
of this system to the high priest of the supreme water temple, as
other temple priests look on.
Participant Observation
•
A research method in which one learns about
a group’s beliefs and behaviors through
social participation and personal observation
within the community, as well as interviews
and discussion with individual members of
the group over an extended stay in the
community.
Key Consultant
A member of the society being studied, who
provides information that helps researchers
understand the meaning of what they
observe.
• Early anthropologists referred to such
individuals as informants.
•
Quantitative Data
•
Statistical or measurable information, such as
demographic composition, the types and
quantities of crops grown, or the ratio of
spouses born and raised within or outside the
community.
Qualitative Data
•
Nonstatistical information such as personal
life stories and customary beliefs and
practices.
Photographs
•
Anthropologists
sometimes use
photographs during
fieldwork as eliciting
devices, sharing
pictures of cultural
objects or activities for
example, to encourage
locals to talk about and
explain what they see.
Interviewing
Informal interview
– An unstructured, open-ended conversation
in everyday life.
• Formal interview
– A structured question/answer session
carefully notated as it occurs and based on
prepared questions.
•
Challenges of Anthropology
•
Among the numerous mental challenges
anthropologists commonly face are
– Culture shock
– Loneliness
– Feeling like an ignorant outsider
– Being socially awkward in a new cultural
setting.
Challenges of Anthropology
•
Physical challenges typically include:
– Adjusting to unfamiliar food, climate, and
hygiene conditions
– Needing to be constantly alert because
anything that is happening or being said
may be significant to one’s research.
– Ethnographers must spend considerable
time interviewing, making copious notes,
and analyzing data.
Fieldwork
•
•
•
U.S. anthropologist William
Crocker did fieldwork among
Canela Indians in Brazil over
several decades.
In this 1964 photograph, a
Canela woman gives him a
traditional haircut.
She is the wife of his
adoptive Canela “brother”
and therefore a “wife” to
Crocker in Canela kinship.
Accurately Describing a
Culture
•
To accurately describe a culture an
anthropologist needs to seek out and
consider three kinds of data:
1. The people’s own understanding of their
culture and the general rules they share.
2. The extent to which people believe they
are observing those rules.
3. The behavior that can be directly
observed.
Trobriand Women
•
In the Trobriand Islands, women’s wealth consists of
skirts and banana leaves, large quantities of which
must be given away on the death of a relative.
Wednesday October 2, 2013
OBJ: SWBAT understand Ethnography and
how to conduct the research.
• Drill: Review mini Ethnography Project
• Homework: Due Friday, come up with an idea
for your project. Get it approved by Friday
•
Digital Ethnography
•
The use of digital technologies (audio and
visual) for the collection, analysis, and
representation of ethnographic data.
Ethnohistory
•
A study of cultures of the recent past through
oral histories, accounts of explorers,
missionaries, and traders, and through
analysis of records such as land titles, birth
and death records, and other archival
materials.
Theory
•
In science an explanation of natural
phenomena, supported by a reliable body of
data.
Doctrine
An assertion of opinion or belief formally
handed down by an authority as true and
indisputable.
• Also known as dogma.
•
Human Relations Area Files
(HRAF)
A vast collection of cross-indexed
ethnographic and archaeological data
catalogued by cultural characteristics and
geographic locations.
• Archived in about 300 libraries (on microfiche
and/or online).
•
Advocacy Anthropology
•
•
Anthropologist David Maybury-Lewis interviews Xavante Indians
in the Brazilian savannah where he has made numerous
fieldwork visits since the 1950s.
Maybury-Lewis is founder of the indigenous advocacy
organization Cultural Survival, based in Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
Anthropology’s Theoretical
Perspectives
Idealist perspective
– A theoretical approach stressing the
primacy of superstructure in cultural
research and analysis.
• Materialist perspective
– A theoretical approach stressing the
primacy of infrastructure (material
conditions) in cultural research and
analysis.
•
Informed Consent
Formal recorded agreement to participate in
research.
• When it is a challenge to obtain informed
consent, or even impossible to precisely
explain the meaning and purpose of this
concept and its actual consequences,
anthropologists may protect the identities of
individuals.
•