articleHau Journal of Ethnographic TheoryJun 1, 2014GREEN OA

That’s enough about ethnography!

University of Aberdeen

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Ethnography has become a term so overused, both in anthropology and in contingent disciplines, that it has lost much of its meaning. I argue that to attribute “ethnographicness” to encounters with those among whom we carry on our research, or more generally to fieldwork, is to undermine both the ontological commitment and the educational purpose of anthropology as a discipline, and of its principal way of working—namely participant observation. It is also to reproduce a pernicious distinction between those with whom we study and learn, respectively within and beyond the academy. Anthropology’s obsession with ethnography, more than anything else, is curtailing its public voice. The way to regain it is through…

Citation impact

652
total citations
FWCI
203.15
Percentile
100%
References
22
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Ethnography
  • Sociology
  • Participant observation
  • Applied anthropology
  • Meaning (existential)
  • Anthropology
  • Value (mathematics)
  • Principal (computer security)
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