6533b82bfe1ef96bd128e2e5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Practices of Writing in Ethnographic Work

Larissa SchindlerHilmar Schäfer

subject

060101 anthropologyPractice theorySociology and Political Science05 social sciencesmethodology06 humanities and the artsethnographySTSLanguage and Linguistics0506 political scienceUrban Studiesddc:390epistemological practicesWork (electrical)AnthropologyPedagogyEthnography390 Bräuche Etikette Folklore050602 political science & public administrationKey (cryptography)0601 history and archaeologySociologypractice theoryAir travel

description

Although the practice of writing is key to the production of ethnographic knowledge, the topic remains understudied. Using material from our own ethnographic research in the fields of air travel and cultural heritage as data, we develop a reflexive account of ethnographic writing. We examine in detail the practices of jotting down observations, writing field notes, analytic annotating, ordering and rearranging, and drafting and revising papers. The article takes a praxeological stance, conceptualizing writing as a practice that is simultaneously cognitive, embodied, and material. Our analysis finds that writing influences and shapes all stages of ethnographic work, from orienting perception by setting an appropriate mode of attention to organizing the work itself, e.g., by keeping to-do lists. Writing does not simply communicate ethnographic insights, but—as a result of the activity of texts—it also generates them.

10.1177/0891241620923396http://edoc.hu-berlin.de/18452/23644