none1noToday ethnography is extremely fragmented. What once was its core – the “field” – has now progressively ex- ploded. Very few anthropologists today would start their researches with in mind notions of field and fieldwork rigidly localized. If anthropologists have historically opted for conducting work on “traditional” and “au- thentic” usages and customs and “pure” and uncon- taminated social and cultural systems, now awareness is raising about what is beyond the field, i.e. the “wider world” surrounding it. Once strictly situated, localized, intensive, deep and, indeed, artisan project, fieldwork progressively entails a capacity to look outwardly. What distinguishes cultural anthropology is no more a prac- tical mode of research, a s...