Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Metaethnography in the Age of "Popular Folklore"

View through CrossRef
Abstract This article focuses on the current proliferation of ethnographies written by nonprofessional ethnographers, a mode of cultural production I call "popular folklore." My task in this work is twofold. First, I discuss the function of professional folklore and anthropology as well as of the cultural commodification of ethnicities in the United States in reconfiguring the "common people"from objects of ethnography into legitimate ethnographic authors. Second, I discuss the value of a metaethnographic perspective on popular folklore for the discipline. I do so by undertaking a close analysis of the politics of a feminist popular ethnography of the "folkness" of Greek America. My reading makes a case for the productive cross-fertilization between the metaethnography of popular folklore and professional ethnography. The circulation of popular folklore, I suggest, opens a discursive space for a tactically interventionist folklore ethnography that engages in a critical dialogue with its nonprofessional counterparts. This proposed research agenda seeks to enlarge the universe of alternative meanings about the social constitution of selves or collectivities while raising acute questions about the ways to enhance the public resonance of critical folklore scholarship.
Title: Metaethnography in the Age of "Popular Folklore"
Description:
Abstract This article focuses on the current proliferation of ethnographies written by nonprofessional ethnographers, a mode of cultural production I call "popular folklore.
" My task in this work is twofold.
First, I discuss the function of professional folklore and anthropology as well as of the cultural commodification of ethnicities in the United States in reconfiguring the "common people"from objects of ethnography into legitimate ethnographic authors.
Second, I discuss the value of a metaethnographic perspective on popular folklore for the discipline.
I do so by undertaking a close analysis of the politics of a feminist popular ethnography of the "folkness" of Greek America.
My reading makes a case for the productive cross-fertilization between the metaethnography of popular folklore and professional ethnography.
The circulation of popular folklore, I suggest, opens a discursive space for a tactically interventionist folklore ethnography that engages in a critical dialogue with its nonprofessional counterparts.
This proposed research agenda seeks to enlarge the universe of alternative meanings about the social constitution of selves or collectivities while raising acute questions about the ways to enhance the public resonance of critical folklore scholarship.

Related Results

Putting the Sorting Hat on J.K. Rowling’s Reader: A digital inquiry into the age of the implied readership of the Harry Potter series
Putting the Sorting Hat on J.K. Rowling’s Reader: A digital inquiry into the age of the implied readership of the Harry Potter series
Compared to the large body of research into gender, race and class in children’s literature, there has been little awareness of the social construction of age in this discourse. An...
The Stone Age in Cyprus
The Stone Age in Cyprus
Rich remains from all periods of the Copper and Bronze Age have been found in Cyprus ever since archaeological excavations began there, but hitherto there has been no evidence of a...
Gambling and ageing: less illusion but more risk
Gambling and ageing: less illusion but more risk
Abstract Seniors are a population of concern due to exposure to both increasing gambling venues and powerful age-specific risk factors. There has been only limited research on t...
The Golden Age and the KYKΛOΣ ΓENEΣEΩN (Cyclical Theory) in Greek and Latin Literature
The Golden Age and the KYKΛOΣ ΓENEΣEΩN (Cyclical Theory) in Greek and Latin Literature
The belief in a golden age is not confined to any one age or civilization. In every civilized community there tends to grow up a nostalgia for the simpler life of bygone days; and ...
Palaepaphos-Teratsoudhia Tomb 288 (c. 1650 BC–c. 1200 BC)
Palaepaphos-Teratsoudhia Tomb 288 (c. 1650 BC–c. 1200 BC)
This paper presents a new tomb complex of the Late Bronze Age at Palaepaphos-Teratsoudhia in south-west Cyprus. Although looted, Tomb 288 yielded a representative repertoire of fun...
The Coming of Age to Australian Forests
The Coming of Age to Australian Forests
The concept of 'old-growth' has gained public recognition and political force in Australia where government agencies are engaged in mapping its distribution. Its curious definition...
The Chinese Jade Age
The Chinese Jade Age
Recent and abundant archaeological discoveries of Neolithic jade in China have prompted Chinese scholars and archaeologists alike to discuss the concept of the Jade Age as a way to...
Juvenal VI. 1–20, and Some Ancient Attitudes to the Golden Age
Juvenal VI. 1–20, and Some Ancient Attitudes to the Golden Age
Juvenal's sixth Satire begins with a prologue describing the Golden Age which, for the light it sheds both on ancient attitudes to the Saturnian myth and on the Juvenalian concept ...

Back to Top