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

Ethnography as participant listening

View through CrossRef
Anyone involved in ethnographic research knows that in practice participant listening is an important technique employed by ethnographers, particularly among those of us who live in an ‘interview society’; yet its importance is barely acknowledged in the ethnographic literature. It is curious that ethnographers seem not to have reflected much on a gap between what we say we do and our real life practice. Based partly on my own research into schools and schooling, alongside the work of various other practitioners, I argue the need to better acknowledge the importance of engaged listening for ethnography, and the ways in which personal style (visual learners versus aural learners) impacts ethnographic data production. I also examine the use of interviews in social research, exploring ways in which we might construe ‘the interview’ conducted with an ethnographic imaginary as an ‘experience-near’ event in Western settings: they offer truly ethnographic moments.
Title: Ethnography as participant listening
Description:
Anyone involved in ethnographic research knows that in practice participant listening is an important technique employed by ethnographers, particularly among those of us who live in an ‘interview society’; yet its importance is barely acknowledged in the ethnographic literature.
It is curious that ethnographers seem not to have reflected much on a gap between what we say we do and our real life practice.
Based partly on my own research into schools and schooling, alongside the work of various other practitioners, I argue the need to better acknowledge the importance of engaged listening for ethnography, and the ways in which personal style (visual learners versus aural learners) impacts ethnographic data production.
I also examine the use of interviews in social research, exploring ways in which we might construe ‘the interview’ conducted with an ethnographic imaginary as an ‘experience-near’ event in Western settings: they offer truly ethnographic moments.

Related Results

Study on interactions between voicing production and perception using auditory feedback paradigm
Study on interactions between voicing production and perception using auditory feedback paradigm
A previous study reported that perturbed auditory feedback affected voicing production [Mitsuya, MacDonald, and Munhall (2014). J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 135, 2986–2994]. In this study,...
Music listening to decrease intensity of agitated behaviour after severe acquired brain injury: An experimental multi-case study
Music listening to decrease intensity of agitated behaviour after severe acquired brain injury: An experimental multi-case study
Agitated behavior following a traumatic brain injury is frequent, placing patients and staff at risk of injury. Such behaviors decrease rehabilitation outcomes. This case study exp...
What Crowdsourcing Can Offer to Cross-Cultural Psychological Science
What Crowdsourcing Can Offer to Cross-Cultural Psychological Science
Although the benefits of crowdsourcing research models have been outlined elsewhere, very little attention has been paid to the application of these models to cross-cultural behavi...
Human and man side by side, woman trapped in a different reality: word associations in Czech
Human and man side by side, woman trapped in a different reality: word associations in Czech
b1_The main objective of the research was to verify the symbolic asymmetry in spontaneous and socially shared representations of gender categories, also on the evaluative dimension...
Virginia Woolf, Anechoic Architecture, and the Acoustic Hermeneutic
Virginia Woolf, Anechoic Architecture, and the Acoustic Hermeneutic
Abstract This article describes Virginia Woolf's preoccupation with acoustics and its relationship both to her writing process and to the development of sensibility ...
Unlocking the Black Box of AI Listening Machines: Assemblages for Art, Technology and Innovation
Unlocking the Black Box of AI Listening Machines: Assemblages for Art, Technology and Innovation
The black box of innovation in the realm of connected AI technologies renders not only their technicalities opaque but also, and more importantly, the social effects and relations ...
Learning from Henry Mayhew
Learning from Henry Mayhew
The almost forgotten ethnographer, Henry Mayhew, is shown to be of methodological relevance to contemporary ethnography in the context of current hesitations, doubts, and rejection...
The Participant as Ally and Essentialist Portraiture
The Participant as Ally and Essentialist Portraiture
This article describes some of the essential features of a methodological approach to studying individuals’ deeper motivations and experiences. The overall approach consists of “in...

Back to Top