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Ethnographic Fieldwork
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15 July 2020

Ethnographic fieldwork is something which is often presented as mysterious and inexplicable. How do we know certain things after having done fieldwork? Are we sure we know? And what exactly do we know? This book describes ethnographic fieldwork as the gradual accumulation of knowledge about something you don’t know much about. We start from ignorance and gradually move towards knowledge, on the basis of practices for which we have theoretical and methodological motivations. Jan Blommaert and Dong Jie draw on their own experiences as fieldworkers in explaining the complexities of ethnographic fieldwork as a knowledge trajectory. They do so in an easily accessible way that makes these complexities easier to understand and to handle before, during and after fieldwork. The 2nd edition of this bestselling book updates the 1st edition and includes a new postscript on ethnography in an online world.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Linguistics, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Sociolinguistics, REFERENCE / Research, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General, Sociolinguistics, Cultural studies, Social and cultural anthropology, Research methods / methodology
This book takes the reader into a wonderfully complex, multivocal conversation on ethnographic practice. The new edition successfully extends these conversations into the ever more ‘ethnographically thick’ realm of online socialisation and subjectivation. It provides guidance and insights which are edifying and superbly didactic for beginners while profoundly inspiring for advanced scholars.
Jan Blommaert is Professor of Language, Culture and Globalization at Tilburg University (The Netherlands) and is also affiliated to Ghent University (Belgium) and the University of the Western Cape (South Africa). He is the Director of the Babylon Research Center at Tilburg University.
Dong Jie is tenured Associate Professor of Linguistics at Tsinghua University, China. She is the author of Discourse, Identity, and China’s Internal Migration (2011, Multilingual Matters) and The Sociolinguistics of Voice in Globalising China (2017, Routledge).
Preface to the Second Edition
1. Introduction
2. Ethnography
3. The Sequence 1: Prior to Fieldwork
4. The Sequence 2: In the Field
5. The Sequence 3: After Fieldwork
6. By Way of Conclusion
7. Postscript: When Your Field Goes Online
References