Synopses & Reviews
This book has two central purposes: to demonstrate the importance of qualitative research through an examination of the type of data that it is capable of producing, and, to do so using first-hand research accounts of ethnographic work. In reflecting upon personal experiences of field-work, together with the research strategies employed, the authors illustrate their arguments in a detailed and accessible manner. The themes they discuss include the ethics and politics of field-work, reflexivity and data production, feminist field-work, the publication and production of studies, and an examination of the contrasting cultures of academia and what is normally termed the 'field', where knowledges are authenticated according to different rules and power relations.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [238]-239) and index.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: Field-Work
Like that Desmond Morris?, Gary Armstrong
Peer, Careers, and Academic Fears Writing as Field-Work, Dick Hobbs
Part II: Politics
Feeling Matter: Inverting the Hidden Equation, Tim May
Taking Sides: Partisan Research on the 1984-5 Miners' Strike, Penny Green
Part III
Some Ethical Considerations on Field-Work with the Police, Clive Norris
Dealing with Data, Jane Fountain
Part IV: Women and Ethnography
Greenham Revisited: Researching Myself and My Sisters, Sasha Roseneil
Racism, Sexuality, and the Process of Ethnographic Research, H. L. Ackers