This article presents a reflective account of the emotional dimensions of in-depth field research in prisons. Drawing on the work of Goffman to make sense of ethnographic processes and techniques, it is argued that performance and impression management play crucial roles in the research process. However, it is suggested that there are commensurate emotional costs associated with the roles and identities that ethnographers might enact in the field. It is argued that the finer details of ethnographic practice can be better understood when the emotional dimensions of research experiences are carefully analysed and processed
While there is a tradition of recognising and contending with the emotional content of ethnography (...
Emotions have historically played a marginal role in many arenas of anthropological analysis, often ...
There is little acknowledgement of researcher emotions in qualitative texts; especially so, within t...
In this article, a selection of emotionally charged situations encountered while conducting an ethno...
Undertaking in-depth, ethnographic research in prisons requires significant amounts of practical and...
Prolonged periods collecting data alone and away from home are established aspects of doctoral resea...
The emotionality of prison research has received much justified attention in recent years. However, ...
Despite the central importance of ethnographic methods to sociological understandings of imprisonmen...
Prison ethnography offers researchers a unique vantage point from which to explore the relationships...
Gaining access to formal institutions can be problematic for ethnographers. This is especially so wh...
The Palgrave Handbook of Prison Ethnography provides an expansive overview of the challenges present...
Ethnographic research methods have gained increased popularity within the field of organisation stud...
This paper seeks to open up for discussion the emotional world of researchers in a manner that encou...
In this article, the concept of emotional labor is used to capture dilemmas of critical ethnographic...
This chapter explores the role of emotions and emotional experiences during ethnographic fieldwork c...
While there is a tradition of recognising and contending with the emotional content of ethnography (...
Emotions have historically played a marginal role in many arenas of anthropological analysis, often ...
There is little acknowledgement of researcher emotions in qualitative texts; especially so, within t...
In this article, a selection of emotionally charged situations encountered while conducting an ethno...
Undertaking in-depth, ethnographic research in prisons requires significant amounts of practical and...
Prolonged periods collecting data alone and away from home are established aspects of doctoral resea...
The emotionality of prison research has received much justified attention in recent years. However, ...
Despite the central importance of ethnographic methods to sociological understandings of imprisonmen...
Prison ethnography offers researchers a unique vantage point from which to explore the relationships...
Gaining access to formal institutions can be problematic for ethnographers. This is especially so wh...
The Palgrave Handbook of Prison Ethnography provides an expansive overview of the challenges present...
Ethnographic research methods have gained increased popularity within the field of organisation stud...
This paper seeks to open up for discussion the emotional world of researchers in a manner that encou...
In this article, the concept of emotional labor is used to capture dilemmas of critical ethnographic...
This chapter explores the role of emotions and emotional experiences during ethnographic fieldwork c...
While there is a tradition of recognising and contending with the emotional content of ethnography (...
Emotions have historically played a marginal role in many arenas of anthropological analysis, often ...
There is little acknowledgement of researcher emotions in qualitative texts; especially so, within t...