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ANTH2197: Reading Ethnography

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Type Tied
Level 2
Credits 10
Availability Available in 2023/24
Module Cap None.
Location Durham
Department Anthropology

Prerequisites

  • Peoples and Cultures (ANTH1061) OR Being Human (ANTH1111)

Corequisites

  • Research Project Design (ANTH2187).

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • Biology, Culture and Society (ANTH2207).

Aims

  • To explore the practical, epistemic and methodological aspects of ethnography as the distinctive method of socio-cultural anthropology.
  • To understand the workings of ethnographic writing and ethnographic argument through detailed engagement with book-length monographs.
  • To enable students to develop the specific critical and theoretical skills required to unpack others' (and construct their own) ethnographic accounts

Content

  • Ethnographic methods and their relationship to theory: how ethnographic writing uses and generates new concepts through sustained engagements with specific social contexts.
  • A cross-cutting comparative focus on ethnographic writing, highlighting similarities and differences in relation to: narrative structure and approach; authorial voice; the politics and poetics of representation.
  • Topics will be tailored to themes arising in the chosen monographs, which may include: the relationship of explanatory theories to ethnographic research: learning and interpreting everyday life; non-participant observation; film and visual anthropology; participation, power and collaborative ethnography; reflexivity in ethnographic research; ethical issues in ethnographic research; and writing ethnography
  • Close reading and discussion of ethnographic texts: One of the most distinctive aspects of anthropology as a discipline is the way in which theoretical arguments are articulated through detailed, in-depth ethnographic accounts of particular places.

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • Have an advanced knowledge of some key ethnographic texts in recent anthropology.
  • Have an advanced knowledge of key theoretical issues and debates relating to anthropological enquiry.
  • Understand and critically evaluate the relevance of ethnography as a mode of anthropological research.
  • Ability to apply theoretical insights to ethnographic texts and contexts.
  • An appreciation of how ethnographies have changed over time.

Subject-specific Skills:

  • An ability to read and critically evaluate book-length ethnographic arguments.
  • Competency to conduct in-depth and theoretically informed analysis of a particular issue in relation to detailed ethnographic material.
  • Engage anthropological arguments in relation to ethnographic methodology, ethics and epistemology.

Key Skills:

  • Prepare and present scholarly work for seminars and assessment.
  • Independent and critical reading of ethnographies.

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • The module is topped and tailed by 2 lectures. The first introductory session sets out the general intellectual context of the module, introduces reading strategies and highlights key themes and questions that intersect across the different ethnographic readings. The final lecture draws out key points from these.
  • Lectures will focus on an ethnographic monograph, and will help to frame small-group, student-led discussions about the text in the corresponding seminars.
  • Seminars will help students to develop a deeper understanding of the production and presentation of ethnographic knowledge, and its relationship to anthropological theory, via close readings of ethnographic texts and critical discussion in small group settings.
  • Seminars will integrate lecture, tutorial and presentations, with the balance dictated by appropriateness to the book in question.
  • For each text, students will write up a mini critique to prepare for seminar discussions and presentations.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Lectures8Michaelmas term1 hour8 
Seminars5Michaelmas term1 hour5Yes
Preparation and Reading89 
Total100 

Summative Assessment

Component: CourseworkComponent Weighting: 100%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Essay2500100Yes

Formative Assessment

Reading log: 200-250 words per ethnography.

More information

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