Transcript Document
ETHNOGRAPHY
Geography 23350: Qualitative
Methods
Week 4
Dr Malcolm Fairbrother
29/10/2009
Outline
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
Purser 2009
Defining Ethnography
Why (Not) Ethnography?
Other Examples of Ethnography
Dilemmas in Ethnography
Origins of Ethnography
Instructions for the Practical
(1) Purser 2009
•
•
•
•
•
context: immigration and the U.S. labour
market
two sites to investigate the subjective
experience of day labouring
finding: the pursuit of dignity, and
comparisons to the undignified
gender: what it means to be a man
methods: hanging around and watching,
interviews
(1) Purser 2009
(1) Purser 2009
(2) Defining Ethnography
“social research based on the close-up, onthe-ground observation of people and
institutions in real time and space, in which
the investigator embeds herself near (or
within) the phenomenon so as to detect how
and why agents on the scene act, think and
feel the way they do”
(Wacquant 2003: 5)
(2) Defining Ethnography
immersion in (often unfamiliar) social settings
“thick description” (vivid, narrative)
emphasis on people’s subjective “lived experience”
variants and approaches:
1. active participation (e.g., as a worker)
2. casual participation (e.g., hanging around a place)
3. non-participant observation (possibly covert)
4. combination with (formal/informal) interviews
application to broader theoretical work
common (though not universal) interests:
the marginalised, the weak, the deviant, the
illegal
(3a) Why Ethnography?
(3a) Why Ethnography?
•
access to marginalised populations
•
necessity—maybe no other way to study
them
rich description of social life
•
more “human” than a data frame
capturing subjective experience
•
get a sense of how subjects experience and
perceive the world
eliciting sensitive/intimate information
may be able to win subjects’ trust through
repeated contacts/interactions
(3b) Why Not Ethnography?
(3b) Why Not Ethnography?
•
causality
hard to assess what factors make things
different
not enough units to do statistics
•
representativeness/generalisability
•
site/“sample” may not be typical
perspective
may be hard to see broader context
may be swayed by subjects’ perspectives
(4) Other Examples of Ethnography
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Bernstein: sex workers and their clients
Bourgois: drug trade in Harlem
Burawoy: Chicago factory (and others)
Kunda: tech workers
Malinowski: Pacific Islanders
Sallaz: casinos in California and S Africa
Wacquant: boxers in Chicago
Whyte: American “slum” (Boston)
Willis: working class boys in Britain
(5) Dilemmas in Ethnography
•
•
•
•
•
•
getting access and building trust
biases, misunderstandings, and
inaccurate interpretations
risk of misrepresenting (sometimes
powerless) subjects
ethnographer’s influence on the field site
disclosure/presentation/relationship to
subjects (and other ethical concerns)
how to approach going into the field, and
how to apply findings to theory
(6) Origins of Ethnography
•
anthropology
•
fieldwork in overseas, pre-industrial societies
links to natural history, colonial rule
sociology
Chicago School of urban research
questions about social change and
(dis)integration in fast-growing industrial
cities
(7) Practical
see handout…
choosing a site: be creative!
I’ll be in my office (2.17N) until 2:00PM,
then back here
SoGS office: 0117 928 9954
be back by 4:30, with your fieldnotes!