Abstract
Ethnographic work occupies an uneasy spectrum of experiences, and in this timely discussion where ethnographic challenges are being given their rightful place – my arguments join the discussion by urging a slowing down, a stopping and taking stock about what counts as good work in our current professional environment. I attempt a reflection on immersed anthropologists, and in some ways, on those amongst whom we immerse. The base queries that animate these reflections are – who, what, where and how will ‘good’ anthropological work be decided. The curious fascination with heroic, ideologically driven, ‘difficult’ ethnography is a point of departure here. Once again, they lead to questions about the allocations of labor and power in ethnographic work and in disciplinary knowledge production practices.
Publisher
Victoria University of Wellington Library
Subject
General Health Professions
Cited by
3 articles.
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1. To write or not to write?;American Ethnologist;2023-12-27
2. Ethnography after anthropology;American Ethnologist;2023-07-13
3. Insecurities of nativism;HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory;2022-03-01