In recent years, crucial questions have been raised about anthropology as a discipline, such as whether ethnography is central to the subject, and how imagination, reality and truth are joined in anthropological enterprises. These interventions have impacted anthropologists and scholars at large. This volume contributes to the debate about the interrelationships between ethnography and anthropology and takes it to a new plane. Six anthropologists with field experience in Egypt, Greece, India, Laos, Mauritius, Thailand and Switzerland critically discuss these propositions in order to renew anthropology for the future. The volume concludes with an Afterword from Tim Ingold.Introduction: Anthropology and Ethnography are Not Equivalent Irfan Ah...
Over the last four decades, ethnography, which had long been imagined as a self-evident and unproble...
American Anthropology is engaged in significant self-reckonings that call for big changes to how ant...
For most of the twentieth century, anthropologists understood themselves as ethnographers. The art o...
That’s enough about ethnography! Tim Ingold, University of Aberdeen Ethnography has become a term so...
Ethnography has become a term so overused, both in anthropology and in contingent disciplines, that ...
There has been a veritable explosion across various disciplines ‘discovering' ethnography over the p...
none1noToday ethnography is extremely fragmented. What once was its core – the “field” – has now pro...
In this debate piece, I argue that there is something more important than the discipline of anthropo...
A number of anthropology’s most emblematic innovations have caught on elsewhere. Yet anthropologists...
Contribution to a volume reflecting on Tim Ingold’s recent interventions on the relationship between...
A major critique of the globalization of the culture principle in anthropology. This study contends ...
The ethnographic methods that anthropologists first developed to study other cultures-fieldwork, par...
This paper provides a clear understanding of the challenges faced by Social Science ethnographers wh...
Over the last decade, the sociology of religion and religious studies have experienced a surge of et...
Ethnography has become something of a buzzword in recent years. It is talked about and invoked in di...
Over the last four decades, ethnography, which had long been imagined as a self-evident and unproble...
American Anthropology is engaged in significant self-reckonings that call for big changes to how ant...
For most of the twentieth century, anthropologists understood themselves as ethnographers. The art o...
That’s enough about ethnography! Tim Ingold, University of Aberdeen Ethnography has become a term so...
Ethnography has become a term so overused, both in anthropology and in contingent disciplines, that ...
There has been a veritable explosion across various disciplines ‘discovering' ethnography over the p...
none1noToday ethnography is extremely fragmented. What once was its core – the “field” – has now pro...
In this debate piece, I argue that there is something more important than the discipline of anthropo...
A number of anthropology’s most emblematic innovations have caught on elsewhere. Yet anthropologists...
Contribution to a volume reflecting on Tim Ingold’s recent interventions on the relationship between...
A major critique of the globalization of the culture principle in anthropology. This study contends ...
The ethnographic methods that anthropologists first developed to study other cultures-fieldwork, par...
This paper provides a clear understanding of the challenges faced by Social Science ethnographers wh...
Over the last decade, the sociology of religion and religious studies have experienced a surge of et...
Ethnography has become something of a buzzword in recent years. It is talked about and invoked in di...
Over the last four decades, ethnography, which had long been imagined as a self-evident and unproble...
American Anthropology is engaged in significant self-reckonings that call for big changes to how ant...
For most of the twentieth century, anthropologists understood themselves as ethnographers. The art o...