TY - JOUR
T1 - Re-locating the ethnographic field
T2 - From 'Being There' to 'Being There'
AU - Craith, Máiréad Nic
AU - Hill, Emma
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Berghahn Journals.
PY - 2015/3/1
Y1 - 2015/3/1
N2 - When considering the ethnographic field, language use has been of continued anthropological concern. Traditional approaches to the field have associated language use with concepts such as place, territory and ethnicity and have tended to bound them within a single site. However, in conditions of increasing globalised mobility, approaches to both fieldwork and language use within the field are changing. Using existing scholarship on minority-language communities in Europe alongside original fieldwork with Somali migrants in Glasgow, this article considers the dynamics of that relationship within the contexts of single-sited, multi-sited and online fields. It finds that, for an inquiry focused on both language use and mobility, established modes of thinking about the field are a methodologically restrictive practice on 'being there'. Instead, the authors argue for rethinking the field as a 'spoken' one where, with language at the fore, emphasis is placed on 'being there'.
AB - When considering the ethnographic field, language use has been of continued anthropological concern. Traditional approaches to the field have associated language use with concepts such as place, territory and ethnicity and have tended to bound them within a single site. However, in conditions of increasing globalised mobility, approaches to both fieldwork and language use within the field are changing. Using existing scholarship on minority-language communities in Europe alongside original fieldwork with Somali migrants in Glasgow, this article considers the dynamics of that relationship within the contexts of single-sited, multi-sited and online fields. It finds that, for an inquiry focused on both language use and mobility, established modes of thinking about the field are a methodologically restrictive practice on 'being there'. Instead, the authors argue for rethinking the field as a 'spoken' one where, with language at the fore, emphasis is placed on 'being there'.
KW - Closed community
KW - Great Blasket Island
KW - Multi-sited fieldwork
KW - Online ethnography
KW - Somali
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U2 - 10.3167/ajec.2015.240104
DO - 10.3167/ajec.2015.240104
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84929340659
SN - 1755-2923
VL - 24
SP - 42
EP - 62
JO - Anthropological Journal of European Cultures
JF - Anthropological Journal of European Cultures
IS - 1
ER -