Anthropologists at Home in North America
Methods and issues in the study of one's own society
$41.99 (C)
- Author: Donald A. Messerschmidt, Washington State University
- Date Published: December 1981
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521284196
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The issue of practising anthropology in one's own society is the focus of this volume of seventeen essays, originally published in 1981. The contributions, written by US and Canadian anthropologists, deal with methods, theories and styles of doing research in North America. Rich and sometimes candid descriptions of the strategies and orienting concepts employed to order the data and the research experience made this book a contribution to both theory and method. Traditionally, the research domains of anthropologists have been societies and cultures other than their own. Research by anthropologists in their own societies received renewed emphasis partly because of a heightened awareness of social problems. This book examines how innovative scholars applied anthropology to non-traditional research questions in urban and rural society, in health and education systems, and in the field of contract anthropology.
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×Product details
- Date Published: December 1981
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521284196
- length: 324 pages
- dimensions: 229 x 152 x 18 mm
- weight: 0.48kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
Preface
Part I. Introduction:
1. On anthropology 'at home' Donald A. Messerschmidt
2. Insider research: an ethnography of a debate John L. Aguilar
Part II. Urban Studies:
3. Unseen community: the natural history of a research project Paul Bohannan
4. Common sense and science: urban core black observations John L. Gwaltney
5. Observer participation and consulting: research in urban food cooperatives Richard Zimmer
6. The masking of social reality: ethnographic fieldwork in the bureaucracy David Serber
Part III. Rural Studies:
7. Longitudinal research in rural North America: the Saskatchewan Cultural Ecology Research Program, 1960–1973 John W. Bennett and Seena Kohl
8. Social networks and community administration: a comparative study of two mining towns Susan Brandt Graham
9. The anthropologist as key informant: inside a rural Oregon town Lawrence Hennigh
10. Neighboring: discovering support systems among Norwegian-American women Agnes M. Aamodt
Part IV. Health Systems:
11. Applied ethnoscience in rural America: New Age health and healing Craig Molgaard and Elizabeth Byerly
12. Interactive research in a feminist setting: The Vancouver Women's Health Collective Linda Light and Nancy Kleiber
Part V. Education Systems:
13. Constraints in government research: the anthropologist in a rural school district Donald A. Messerschmidt
14. Many roles, many faces: researching school-community relations in a heterogeneous American urban community R. Timothy Sieber
Part VI. Contract Anthropology:
15. Anthropology under contract: two examples from Alaska Kerry D. Feldman
16. Talking to an agency: communicating the research findings Ruth M. Houghton
Part VII. Reflections on Anthropology at Home:
17. Home and away: personal contrasts in ethnographic style Harry F. Wolcott
Contributors
Notes
Bibliography
Index.
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