Reflexive Ethnographic Practice

Reflexive Ethnographic Practice

Three Generations of Social Researchers in One Place

Bradley, John; Kearney, Amanda

Springer Nature Switzerland AG

03/2020

219

Dura

Inglês

9783030348977

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

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ForewordChapter 1: Introduction - The Scene for a Reflexive PracticeThe start of a story Collaboration and change Our approach to the book Yanyuwa families, country and Law On becoming reflexive Overview References Chapter 2: Writing From the Edge: Writing What Was Never Meant to be WrittenIntroduction Living on the edge: Suffering and loss Field notes and reflections: Transitioning into the academy Writing of knowledge Songs, stories and relationships Knowing loss and finding words Final thoughts Contributor Response, by Philip Adgemis References Chapter 3: Mobility of Mind: Can We Change our Epistemic Habit Through Sustained Ethnograpic Encounters?Introduction What do I know? How did this happen? Mobility of mind: Epistemic habit in the context of fieldwork encounters Sustained ethnographic encounters as acts of testimony and witnessing Did I always know? Why have Yanyuwa taught me? Am I permitted to know an Indigenous epistemology in a settler colonial context? Final thoughts Contributor Response, by John Bradley References Chapter 4: Mapping the Route to the Yanyuwa AtlasIntroduction and orientation Changes, shifts and paradoxes On the road to Borroloola Getting lost: The idea of a map Moving in from the edges Art as ways to express Creased maps and field jottings Jijijirla that comes around again Country and loss Publishing and what next? Contributor Response, by Liam Brady References Chapter 5: "Invisible Things in Nature": A Reflexive Reading of Alexis Wright's CarpentariaIntroduction Carpentaria's unexpectedness The many strands that make up Carpentaria Reading Carpentaria in the light of an apprenticeship in Yanyuwa Cosmology Reading Wright's Rainbow Serpent Final reflection Contributor Response, by Amanda Kearney References Chapter 6: Encounters with Yanyuwa Rock Art: Reflexivity, Multivocality, and the 'Archaeological Record' in Northern Australia's Southwest Gulf CountryIntroduction Reflexivity in archaeology practice Archaeology and the southwest Gulf country Research questions and entering the field Looking for a donkey Kurrmurrnyini and sorcery rock art Discussion and final thoughts Contributor Response, by Nona Cameron References Chapter 7: So Did You Find Any Culture Up Here Mate?: Young Men, 'Deficit' and Change. Introduction Realisations and motivations Discourse and deficit framings: 'Some people just hate us' Expectations and intersubjective connections Change and the shame in not knowing Reflections Contributor Response, by Frances Devlin-Glass References