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Writing anthropology :a call for uni...
~
Bouchetoux, François,
Writing anthropology :a call for uninhibited methods /
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
杜威分類號:
301.01
書名/作者:
Writing anthropology : : a call for uninhibited methods // François Bouchetoux.
作者:
Bouchetoux, François,
面頁冊數:
1 online resource.
標題:
Anthropology - Methodology
標題:
Anthropology - Philosophy.
ISBN:
1137404175 (electronic bk.)
ISBN:
9781137404176 (electronic bk.)
內容註:
Fire -- Water -- 4. Conclusion -- 5. Epilogue.
摘要、提要註:
A call for new strategies for integrating and writing the field of anthropology, this book explores the nature of anthropological knowledge in general and the conditions of integration and communication with people in particular. Starting with an analysis of anthropologists' guilt, which originates from both lacks and excesses of integration into communities of adoption, Bouchetoux addresses issues of reflexivity, reciprocity, honesty, and respect. He then builds on this critique to evaluate the process through which researchers generate knowledge. Using fieldwork in Europe, Africa, and Asia as inspiration, he harks back to positions explored in the 1980s when interactions between anthropology, literary studies, and philosophy were most intense. Parallels between these experiences and Jean-Paul Sartre's "Nausea" lead to an understanding of fieldwork as a malaise whose symptoms (boredom, solitude, miscommunication) contain the seeds of its cure, unveiled in the eroticism of contingency and the possibility of an anthropology through emotions, not discourse.
電子資源:
http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137404176
Writing anthropology :a call for uninhibited methods /
Bouchetoux, François,
Writing anthropology :
a call for uninhibited methods /François Bouchetoux. - 1 online resource.
Fire -- Water -- 4. Conclusion -- 5. Epilogue.
A call for new strategies for integrating and writing the field of anthropology, this book explores the nature of anthropological knowledge in general and the conditions of integration and communication with people in particular. Starting with an analysis of anthropologists' guilt, which originates from both lacks and excesses of integration into communities of adoption, Bouchetoux addresses issues of reflexivity, reciprocity, honesty, and respect. He then builds on this critique to evaluate the process through which researchers generate knowledge. Using fieldwork in Europe, Africa, and Asia as inspiration, he harks back to positions explored in the 1980s when interactions between anthropology, literary studies, and philosophy were most intense. Parallels between these experiences and Jean-Paul Sartre's "Nausea" lead to an understanding of fieldwork as a malaise whose symptoms (boredom, solitude, miscommunication) contain the seeds of its cure, unveiled in the eroticism of contingency and the possibility of an anthropology through emotions, not discourse.
ISBN: 1137404175 (electronic bk.)
Source: 748650Palgrave Macmillanhttp://www.palgraveconnect.comSubjects--Topical Terms:
575834
Anthropology
--MethodologyIndex Terms--Genre/Form:
336502
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: GN33
Dewey Class. No.: 301.01
Writing anthropology :a call for uninhibited methods /
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A call for new strategies for integrating and writing the field of anthropology, this book explores the nature of anthropological knowledge in general and the conditions of integration and communication with people in particular. Starting with an analysis of anthropologists' guilt, which originates from both lacks and excesses of integration into communities of adoption, Bouchetoux addresses issues of reflexivity, reciprocity, honesty, and respect. He then builds on this critique to evaluate the process through which researchers generate knowledge. Using fieldwork in Europe, Africa, and Asia as inspiration, he harks back to positions explored in the 1980s when interactions between anthropology, literary studies, and philosophy were most intense. Parallels between these experiences and Jean-Paul Sartre's "Nausea" lead to an understanding of fieldwork as a malaise whose symptoms (boredom, solitude, miscommunication) contain the seeds of its cure, unveiled in the eroticism of contingency and the possibility of an anthropology through emotions, not discourse.
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http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137404176
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