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Anthropologists are professional strangers—The method of “fieldwork”

Anthropologists are professional strangers—The method of “fieldwork”

ANTH 1001: Introduction to anthropology

Ryan Schram

Week of May 17, 2021 (Week 11)

Slides available at http://anthro.rschram.org/1001/2021/11

What makes anthropology different?

At this point in your first anthropology class, you probably have your own ideas about what makes anthropology different from other social sciences, like sociology? What do you think?

Anthropologists at work

Anthropologists study many of the same things as other social sciences, but they believe that one must go to the people that one wants to understand, talk to them, and learn to see things the way they see them.

Anthropologists don’t work in the lab, or the library, but in “the field”—the real world where people live. An anthropologist’s work is “fieldwork.”

Anthropological “fieldwork” is:

Another term for the colloquial name “fieldwork” is “participant observation.”

Anthropologists write ethnographies

Another great contribution of anthropology to the social sciences is ethnography.

Ethnography is, at least ideally, a comprehensive and synthetic description of a single community of people in a specific place and time.

The story of “fieldwork”: Malinowski in the Trobriands

Another story of fieldwork: Layard on Atchin

Yet another story of fieldwork: Gomberg-Muñoz and The Lions

My fieldwork story

I conducted fieldwork in a society known as Auhelawa, on the south coast of Duau (Normanby Island, Milne Bay Province) in Papua New Guinea.

What I learned from my fieldwork story

My entree into Auhelawa as a “field” of research has taught me what makes anthropological fieldwork different

But there’s more to it. When you “go to the field,” you also have to give up control over your own research.

Only then is there a possibility of discovery, of finding things that you did not even think you would be looking for.

References

Eriksen, Thomas Hylland. 2015. “Fieldwork and Ethnography.” In Small Places, Large Issues: An Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology, 32–51. London: Pluto Press.

Gomberg-Muñoz, Ruth. 2010. “Willing to Work: Agency and Vulnerability in an Undocumented Immigrant Network.” American Anthropologist 112 (2):295–307. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1433.2010.01227.x.

———. 2011. Labor and Legality: An Ethnography of a Mexican Immigrant Network. Oxford: Oxford University Press. http://books.google.com?id=9tb0SAAACAAJ.

Layard, John W. 1942. Stone Men of Malekula. London: Chatto and Windus. http://books.google.com?id=Z6etvQEACAAJ.

Malinowski, Bronislaw. (1922) 1932. Argonauts of the Western Pacific: An Account of Native Enterprise and Adventure in the Archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea. London: George Routledge and Sons, Ltd. http://archive.org/details/argonautsofthewe032976mbp.

Rivers, W. H. R. 1914. The History of Melanesian Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.