Moroccan Dialogues

Moroccan Dialogues
Author: Kevin Dwyer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 338
Release: 1987
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

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College-level ethnography focusing on Morocco. Dialogues provide interesting approach to the study of fieldwork.

Moroccan Dialogues

Moroccan Dialogues
Author: Kevin Dwyer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 327
Release: 1982-01-01
Genre: Ethnology
ISBN: 9780608037271

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College-level ethnography focusing on Morocco. Dialogues provide interesting approach to the study of fieldwork.

The Chicago Guide to Collaborative Ethnography

The Chicago Guide to Collaborative Ethnography
Author: Luke Eric Lassiter
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 217
Release: 2008-08-25
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0226467015

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Collaboration between ethnographers and subjects has long been a product of the close, intimate relationships that define ethnographic research. But increasingly, collaboration is no longer viewed as merely a consequence of fieldwork; instead collaboration now preconditions and shapes research design as well as its dissemination. As a result, ethnographic subjects are shifting from being informants to being consultants. The emergence of collaborative ethnography highlights this relationship between consultant and ethnographer, moving it to center stage as a calculated part not only of fieldwork but also of the writing process itself. The Chicago Guide to Collaborative Ethnography presents a historical, theoretical, and practice-oriented road map for this shift from incidental collaboration to a more conscious and explicit collaborative strategy. Luke Eric Lassiter charts the history of collaborative ethnography from its earliest implementation to its contemporary emergence in fields such as feminism, humanistic anthropology, and critical ethnography. On this historical and theoretical base, Lassiter outlines concrete steps for achieving a more deliberate and overt collaborative practice throughout the processes of fieldwork and writing. As a participatory action situated in the ethical commitments between ethnographers and consultants and focused on the co-construction of texts, collaborative ethnography, argues Lassiter, is among the most powerful ways to press ethnographic fieldwork and writing into the service of an applied and public scholarship. A comprehensive and highly accessible handbook for ethnographers of all stripes, The Chicago Guide to Collaborative Ethnography will become a fixture in the development of a critical practice of anthropology, invaluable to both undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty alike.

Moroccan Dialogues

Moroccan Dialogues
Author: Kevin Dwyer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 297
Release: 1982
Genre:
ISBN:

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Works and Lives

Works and Lives
Author: Clifford Geertz
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 172
Release: 1988
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780804717472

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The illusion that ethnography is a matter of sorting strange and irregular facts into familiar and orderly categories—this is magic, that is technology—has long since been exploded. What it is instead, however, is less clear. That it might be a kind of writing, putting things to paper, has now and then occurred to those engaged in producing it, consuming it, or both. But the examination of it as such has been impeded by several considerations, none of them very reasonable. One of these, especially weighty among the producers, has been simply that it is an unanthropological sort of thing to do. What a proper ethnographer ought properly to be doing is going out to places, coming back with information about how people live there, and making that information available to the professional community in practical form, not lounging about in libraries reflecting on literary questions. Excessive concern, which in practice usually means any concern at all, with how ethnographic texts are constructed seems like an unhealthy self-absorption—time wasting at best, hypochondriacal at worst. The advantage of shifting at least part of our attention from the fascinations of field work, which have held us so long in thrall, to those of writing is not only that this difficulty will become more clearly understood, but also that we shall learn to read with a more percipient eye. A hundred and fifteen years (if we date our profession, as conventionally, from Tylor) of asseverational prose and literary innocence is long enough.

The Interpretation of Dialogue

The Interpretation of Dialogue
Author: Tulio Maranhao
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 388
Release: 1990-02-13
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780226504346

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This superb collection offers an array of rich variations on a theme central to a multitude of disciplines: the nature of dialogue. Drawing on literary, philosophical, and linguistic concepts, the essays range from broad questions of the representation of knowledge and interpretation of meaning to case studies of dialogue's function in specific fields.

The Rebirth of Dialogue

The Rebirth of Dialogue
Author: James P. Zappen
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0791484904

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Dialogue has suffered a long eclipse in the history of philosophy and the history of rhetoric but has enjoyed a rebirth in the work of Hans-Georg Gadamer, Martin Buber, and Mikhail Bakhtin. Among twentieth-century figures, Bakhtin took a special interest in the history of the dialogue form. This book explores Bakhtin's understanding of Socratic dialogue and the notion that dialogue is not simply a way of persuading others to accept our ideas, but a way of holding ourselves, and others, accountable for all of our thoughts, words, and actions. In supporting this premise, Bakhtin challenges the traditions of argument and persuasion handed down from Plato and Aristotle, and he offers, as an alternative, a dialogical rhetoric that restructures the traditional relationship between speakers and listeners, writers and readers, as a mutual testing, contesting, and creating of ideas. The author suggests that Bakhtin's dialogical rhetoric is not restricted to oral discourse, but is possible in any medium, including written, graphic, and digital.

The European Union-Maghrebian Dialogues

The European Union-Maghrebian Dialogues
Author: William H. Lewis
Publisher: CSIS
Total Pages: 76
Release: 2001
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780892063857

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Approaching Dialogue

Approaching Dialogue
Author: Per Linell
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing
Total Pages: 350
Release: 1998
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9027218331

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"Approaching Dialogue" has its primary focus on the theoretical understanding and empirical analysis of talk-in-interaction. It deals with conversation in general as well as talk within institutions against a backdrop of Conversation Analysis, context-based discourse analysis, social pragmatics, socio-cultural theory and interdisciplinary dialogue analysis.People s communicative projects, and the structures and functions of talk-in-interaction, are analyzed from the most local sequences to the comprehensive communicative activity types and genres. A second aim of the book is to explore the possibilities and limitations of dialogism as a general epistemology for cognition and communication. On this point, it portrays the dialogical approach as a major alternative to the mainstream theories of cognition as individually-based information processing, communication as information transfer, and language as a code. Stressing aspects of interaction, joint construction and cultural embeddedness, and drawing upon extensive theoretical and empirical research carried out in different traditions, this book aims at an integrating synthesis. It is largely interdisciplinary in nature, and has been written in such a way that it can be used at advanced undergraduate courses in linguistics, sociopragmatics of language, communication studies, sociology, social psychology and cognitive science.About the author: Per Linell holds a Ph.D. in linguistics and has been professor within the interdisciplinary graduate program of Communication Studies at the University of Linkoping, Sweden, since 1981. He has published widely in the fields of discourse studies and social pragmatics of language.