Fulltext results:
- 13 @1001:2021
- sal.” Ortner means specifically the refusal by an anthropologist to emphasize the emic perspective over an etic pe... tner’s concept of ethnographic refusal is when an anthropologist foregrounds the effects of colonialism and integr... help it create new knowledge? Would becoming an anthropologist of oneself and one’s own community be the best wa... Consent as an Anthropological Virtue.” //American Anthropologist// 116 (3): 511–22. https://doi.org/10.1111/aman.1
- 2.3.0 @1001:2020
- o a casual conversation. If you play the role of "anthropologist," then your interview subject will think they hav... me. ### The key informant as the mirror of the anthropologist Consider for instance how anthropologists learn ... the people they study. Sherry Ortner, a symbolic anthropologist, noticed this and gave it a name: "ethnographic r... sal," Ortner means specifically the refusal by an anthropologist to emphasize the emic perspective over an etic pe
- 5.1.1 @1001:2020
- at his ink has spread all over the room. When an anthropologist enters a new situation, she reacts to everything that is unfamiliar, and people react to the anthropologist’s strange behavior too. These reactions are the c... lues to the imponderabilia of everyday life. The anthropologist sees things that others ignore, but not because the anthropologist is an expert or because she has special insight i
- 11 @1001:2021
- “the field”—the real world where people live. An anthropologist’s work is “fieldwork.” Anthropological “fieldwor... t she wants to understand. * **Long-term**. The anthropologist assumes that it takes time, perhaps a year or mor... in an Undocumented Immigrant Network.” //American Anthropologist// 112 (2):295–307. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548
- 2.2.0 @1001:2020
- too. * Yes, people feel pressure to conform. An anthropologist would emphasize the reaction to the breach, rathe... y in an Undocumented Immigrant Network.” American Anthropologist 112 (2): 295–307. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-
- 12 @1001:2021
- or asking for instruction by a senior. ===== The anthropologist as child ===== To access the emic perspective on... d Consent as an Anthropological Virtue.” American Anthropologist 116 (3): 511–22. https://doi.org/10.1111/aman.121
- 1.1.1 @1001:2020
- ives in terms of culture? ===== Module 2: Can an anthropologist really leave her culture? ===== Anthropologists
- 1.2.2 @1001:2020
- Franz. 1889. “On Alternating Sounds.” //American Anthropologist// 2 (1):47–54. Boas, Franz. (1920) 2006. “The Me
- 2.1.1 @1001:2020
- in an Undocumented Immigrant Network.” //American Anthropologist// 112 (2):295–307. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548
- 2.1.2 @1001:2020
- in an Undocumented Immigrant Network.” //American Anthropologist// 112 (2):295–307. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548
- 1001guide @1001:2020
- [1.3.2|1.3.2]] | Ryan Schram | ^ Module 2: Can an anthropologist really leave her culture? ^ Weeks 4--6 ^ | [[2.1.
- story_analysis @1001:2020
- that complicated. Less is more. Let them talk. As anthropologist Danilyn Rutherford says, "An anthropologist's job is to be interested in what the people around her are intereste
- the_goal_of_this_class @1001:2020
- al of this class is to learn how to think like an anthropologist.** We do not want you to simply to accept what we