A broad distinction may be drawn between interpretive and non-interpretive approaches to ethnographic inquiry. |
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Manes and Wolfson claimed that the most authentic data in sociolinguistic research is spontaneous speech gathered by ethnographic observation. |
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The information panels and labels, on the other hand, are strongly ethnographic so that the exhibition can work at both levels. |
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After conducting fieldwork together in New Guinea, Bateson and Mead coproduced ethnographic films and photodocumentation of Balinese kinesics. |
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Each of the authors draws on ethnographic fieldwork they have conducted separately in Tanzania and Malawi. |
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Watts follows his presentation of the archaeological record with a review of the contemporary ethnographic data on ochre use amongst the Khoisan. |
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To note, the radiocarbon dating of organic ethnographic material is restricted to objects that are more than 200 years old. |
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This study is the result of ethnographic fieldwork completed during a period of 18 months. |
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It presets the bounds of inquiry, cramps the interrogative space, and derails the track switching that earmarks ethnographic work. |
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He remained stubbornly opposed to what ethnographic evidence revealed about Native people. |
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The most detailed ethnographic work on the Saulteaux is by Hallowell, who called them Northern Ojibwa. |
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A more ethnographic approach would have shed some important light on how the Navajo community mediated the changes. |
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After the book's publication, it was treated as an example of ethnographic research. |
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In ethnographic studies, the orientation of the researcher is termed etic or emic. |
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Ethnological concerns in turn were replaced by synchronic ethnographic research on the structure and functioning of individual societies. |
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The gallery will hold an auction of fine antiquities, Pre-Columbian, Far Eastern, Native-American and ethnographic art. |
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Considerable ethnographic material on the Udmurts was collected and published in the last decades of the century. |
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A good ethnographic or art historical photograph blends technique and composition with information and context. |
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Elsewhere, he simply stitched bags together and hung them on stretchers, forming grids that recall framed fabrics in ethnographic galleries. |
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The sampling of informants in ethnographic research is often a combination of convenience sampling and snowball sampling. |
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They were important ethnographic studies in the prevailing American tradition. |
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Objects were seen as having utilitarian or ceremonial value, and were collected for ethnographic significance, or as souvenirs of the primitive. |
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Based on preliminary ethnographic research in five Javanese communities with major Hindu temples, I explore the political history and social dynamics of Hindu revivalism. |
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His earliest wood sculptures, suggesting unlikely mergers of Constructivism and West African ethnographic objects, displayed joinery worthy of a piano builder or luthier. |
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Yet, however timeless many peasant traditions, sayings and beliefs may seem, ethnographic evidence cannot transport us to the world of three centuries ago. |
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The principal part of the program is devoted especially to local ethnographic music and dance groups. |
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To this end, when writing up the results of their ethnographic work, authors play up their academic credentials and qualifications, their previous experience, and so on. |
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The ethnographic study of crack houses and base houses has further contributed to understanding the kinds and contexts of drug-related HIV risk that occur in those settings. |
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Such implausible idealizations, then as now, go hand in hand with nostalgia for the lost or vanishing world of the Gael as initially evoked by ethnographic prefaces. |
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Her previous film and video work shows a distinct concern for documentary visual practices and a fascination with ethnographic films, exampled in her 1999 film Facing Forward. |
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It is of particular interest that there is no known ethnographic or ethnohistoric account of such ceramic items among the current residents of the region, the Odawa. |
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However, it is not easy to generalize about the ethnographic research process in such a way as to provide definitive recommendations about research practice. |
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Musharbash offers ethnographic detail to ongoing discussions on Aboriginality, indigeneity, social change, and cultural transformation in post-colonial states. |
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The ethnographic collection features furniture, jewellery, Cauchois headdresses, and a number of minor professions such as wig and toupee making. |
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Collected and written down valuable folkloristic and ethnographic material. |
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At the same time, the positioning and gender of the ethnographer and the bias in ethnographic data have undergone increasingly close scrutiny. |
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Produced by an Inuit cast and crew, The Fast Runner pays close ethnographic attention to the daily details of Inuit life, from building an igloo to making a sealskin drum. |
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Such ethnographic explorations of film, video and television elsewhere place the book at some distance from many ongoing discussions that conjoin film and anthropology. |
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Suzanne Hyde A specialist in using narrative, participatory and ethnographic methods in community-based research and evaluation. |
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For a number of the women with the ethnographic data I'm thinking of, there are two harms we're really looking at that concern us. |
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There is clearly a great deal of ethnographic data which can be collected and protected as world heritage. |
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The research had two components: a randomized cluster design and a qualitative critical ethnographic component. |
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I have been doing ethnographic research with young immigrants in Montreal, who speak different languages. |
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This method is quite similar to ethnographic research, looking at residents living in buildings characterized by their old and dilapidated state. |
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Open to the public since 1996, this museum holds a collection of ethnographic objects in relation to Madeira's culture and traditions. |
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Main interventions should include baseline participatory assessments and local ethnographic studies. |
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Finally, panellets, according to ethnographic studies, have a ritual meaning, like all traditional confectionery eaten on specific days. |
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It takes time to perform ethnographic research correctly and to build the level of intimacy that takes researchers beyond what they could learn in a focus group setting. |
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The abyss of ethnographic otherness has been momentarily bridged. |
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While the structures of jural obligations may be associated with kin proximity, there is considerable ethnographic evidence that across many societies this is not the case. |
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Such research suggests that the proscription concerning the recourse to ethnographic particulars is honoured more by some discourse analysts than others. |
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This archive consists of hundreds of images of naked men, presumably fresh conscripts and army recruits, taken for an unknown kind of ethnographic exercise. |
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The past as ethnographic material is reconstituted, not only by exploring encoded records of the past, but also by suggesting that there is a constant relation of decoding. |
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In 1910 Petelo Boka, a catechist in the Redemptorist missionary station at Vungu, wrote down a series of historical and ethnographic notes about the Kongo. |
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As such, they also provide a kind of ethnographic record of tensions and conflicts in a society. |
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A second recent development in the study of marriage has revived the project of comparative social science as a complement to the ethnographic discipline of fieldwork. |
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There is in the first place, despite an abundance of detail, a certain ethnographic thinness which reflects partly her incuriosity about Hinduism as such. |
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Subsequent papers are more explicitly ethnographic in their engagement with the notion of interculturalism. |
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There is also an ethnographic collection, where you can find from evening dresses and underclothes from the 18th century to a wide range of tools. |
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Cultural property therefore includes everything from works of art to archaeological artifacts, military objects to archival material, ethnographic material to decorative arts and scientific instruments. |
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It sees itself as part ethnographic museum and part research centre, and the interpreting booths are a lofty combination of henhouse and mousetrap. |
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The ethnographic name Daci is found under various forms within ancient sources. |
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The ethnographic studies of artisans and workers, farmers and cattle breeders that began being undertaken in the 1950s brought to light a panorama of ways of life marked by diversity, mutability and mutual exchange. |
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Several private collectors, meanwhile, donated vast acquisitions of Aboriginal ethnographic material – secret and sacred objects, bark art, hunting weapons and Indigenous bones and body parts. |
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Coca Cola recently launched its Recycle for the Future project – an ethnographic study of consumer recycling behaviour in France and England over a 6-month period in collaboration with Exeter University. |
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The discussion draws on material collected in a year-long ethnographic study of children's role-play in three British pre-school classrooms. |
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As I have worked to incorporate these new perspectives into my own work over recent years, the emphasis has shifted towards bespoke approaches based on ethnographic and co-creation principles. |
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These men spearheaded the explorations and they were found everywhere within the known world, compiling geographical, hydrographic, astronomic, meteorological and ethnographic data. |
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The essays are organized into three sections on identity strategies, decentering the ethnographic self, and anthropology in crucial places. |
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The argument over the role of art and artlessness in travelogues and ethnographic films is also pertinent to newsreels, where the standard principles governing journalism must apply. |
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Doma¸lice is althe center of the Chodsko ethnographic region where the traditions of folklore bagpipe music, dance, traditions and customs are preserved in a lively manner. |
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Various ethnographic and food writers have unanimously highlighted the presence and specific nature of turnip greens as a mainstay of traditional Galician cuisine. |
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Perhaps the final incursions by Germanic people which altered in some ways the ethnographic map of Europe was made by the Vikings. |
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The National Museum of the Cook Islands launched an appeal in June 1999 to museums and private collectors throughout the world for the voluntary return of ethnographic material from the Cook Islands. |
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An analysis of the situation must not, therefore, be based on ethnographic conclusions, and even less on humanitarian lamentation, but on geopolitical factors. |
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My ethnographic and experimental work confirmed this again and again. |
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The ethnographic circumstances of North American clownly behavior need not be repeated here. |
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The Germania fits within a classical ethnographic tradition which includes authors such as Herodotus and Julius Caesar. |
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In 2004, the ethnographic collections from Asia were transferred to the department. |
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Gallery 24 displays ethnographic from every continent while adjacent galleries focus on North America and Mexico. |
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Ethnohistory is the study of ethnographic cultures and indigenous customs by examining historical records. |
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Nerthus is attested by first century AD Roman historian Tacitus in his ethnographic work Germania. |
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However, that in a sense it can be thought of as younger because it ties closely to ethnographic work and collecting habits. |
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Cultural and social anthropologists today place a high value on doing ethnographic research. |
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Beginning in the 1960s and 1970s, ethnographic research methods began to be widely used by communication scholars. |
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Scholars of communication studies use ethnographic research methods to analyze communicative behaviors and phenomena. |
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The American anthropologist George Spindler was a pioneer in applying the ethnographic methodology to the classroom. |
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Anthropologists such as Daniel Miller and Mary Douglas have used ethnographic data to answer academic questions about consumers and consumption. |
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The code of ethics recognizes that sometimes very close and personal relationship can sometimes develop from doing ethnographic work. |
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Ethnoarchaeology is the ethnographic study of living people, designed to aid in our interpretation of the archaeological record. |
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Similar ethnographic accounts have emerged from a variety of cultures since Schneider's intervention. |
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Elemendorf analyzed the ethnographic reports of Drake's stay at New Albion. |
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Using an ethnographic research approach, the experimenter becomes 'immersed' in the everyday activities of persons with moderate to late stage AD in order to generate an in-depth description of their everyday experiences. |
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Importantly, he also undertook an ethnographic study of peasant law among the pagan Zyrian tribe in Siberia, where he discovered a vital folk art quite unlike anything a young bourgeois Moscovite had ever seen. |
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In 1889 the university sent him on an ethnographic mission to the province of Vologda, in the forested north, and he returned with a lasting interest in the often garish, nonrealistic styles of Russian folk painting. |
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He was particularly interested in the use of ethnographic methods and in conceptualisations of power, practice and the self, especially in the work of the sociologist and anthropologist Pierre Bourdieu. |
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The ethnographic method is used across a range of different disciplines, primarily by anthropologists but also occasionally by sociologists. |
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As far as conflict resolution and peace building are concerned in traditional societies in northern Namibia, ethnographic sources mention good magic that was used for purifying and conciliating purposes. |
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Ours of course was not an ethnographic study, but used qualitative research to test various hypotheses based on a previous analysis of the literature on decentralization and to put forward others as appropriate. |
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The central idea disseminated by this ethnographic literature can be summed up by the argument that Arab indolence is not compatible with modernity, which presupposes a culture of effort and discipline. |
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But a vast number of other materials have been used as part of sculptures, in ethnographic and ancient works as much as modern ones. |
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Nyla Ali Khan, deftly combining ethnographic, ethnohistoric, and literary analyses, dramatizes these geopolitical tensions in the everyday lives of the people of Kashmir. |
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The main purpose of his writing seems to be to hold up examples of virtue and vice for his fellow Romans rather than give a truthful ethnographic or historical account. |
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Limited information also exists in Tacitus' ethnographic work Germania. |
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The two most well known of these artists were Frans Post, a landscapist, and a still life painter, Albert Eckhout, who produced ethnographic paintings of Brazil's population. |
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Ethnohistory uses both historical and ethnographic data as its foundation. |
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These ethical dilemmas are evident throughout the entire process of conducting ethnographies, including the design, implementation, and reporting of an ethnographic study. |
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Northern Europe enters the protohistorical period in the early centuries CE, with the adoption of writing and ethnographic accounts by Roman authors. |
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It definitively refuted the legend of a land mass in the north Pacific, and did ethnographic, historic, and scientific research into Siberia and Kamchatka. |
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Ethnobotanist and botanical artist Eisenberg presents her participatory ethnographic research and partnership with the Aymara Indians in the Andes Mountains of northern Chile. |
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Andrea Emberly's research on Venda children reveals the multiple layers of children's musical culture, always in dialogue with the ethnographic self. |
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While in London, Moore extended his knowledge of primitive art and sculpture, studying the ethnographic collections at the Victoria and Albert Museum and the British Museum. |
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