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Multimodal ethnography: A more than textual anthropological workshop - Detailseite

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  • Online Belegung noch nicht möglich oder bereits abgeschlossen
Grunddaten
Veranstaltungsart Seminar Veranstaltungsnummer 51732
Semester SoSe 2021 SWS 2
Rhythmus keine Übernahme Moodle-Link  
Veranstaltungsstatus Freigegeben für Vorlesungsverzeichnis  Freigegeben  Sprache englisch
Belegungsfristen - Eine Belegung ist online erforderlich
Veranstaltungsformat Digital

Termine

Gruppe 1
Tag Zeit Rhythmus Dauer Raum Gebäude Raum-
plan
Lehrperson Status Bemerkung fällt aus am Max. Teilnehmer/-innen
Mo. 14:00 bis 16:00 Einzel am 12.04.2021     findet statt    
Mo. 12:00 bis 16:00 14tgl. von 19.04.2021      findet statt    
Gruppe 1:
Zur Zeit keine Belegung möglich


Zugeordnete Personen
Zugeordnete Personen Zuständigkeit
Farias Hurtado, Ignacio Ariel, Professor, Dr.
Le Calvé, Maxime , Dr.
Studiengänge
Abschluss Studiengang LP Semester
Master of Arts  Ethnographie: Theorie Hauptfach ( Vertiefung: kein LA; POVersion: 2019 )   -  
Master of Arts  Europäische Ethnologie Hauptfach ( Vertiefung: kein LA; POVersion: 2014 )   -  
Zuordnung zu Einrichtungen
Einrichtung
Philosophische Fakultät, Institut für Europäische Ethnologie
Inhalt
Kommentar

In this weekly workshop, students will learn how to plan, design, and implement a multimodal ethnographic inquiry: that is, an ethnography undertaken in and through a plurality of devices to explore other sensory domains and types of knowledge production.  What are the different modes, hence, in which the ethnographic happens beyond the textual? What would it bring to pluralize the means and modalities of our ethnographic inquiries? What do these approaches teach us about ethnography, about its analytic process, and about the choice of appropriate forms of anthropological output? And most importantly, how could this be implemented in a MA research project? The main aspiration of this hands-on space is (i) to develop practical epistemic strategies and discuss the potential impact of experimenting and undertaking multi-modal forms of ethnographic fieldwork and representational output drawing from the students’ investigations. Together, we will (ii) frame the critical discussions and conceptual repertoires needed for aspiring anthropologists to (iii) deal with these methods and these materials and, perhaps more importantly, (iv) to integrate these skills in their academic practices. 

This workshop-based seminar is conceived as a space for students to explore and build on their existing skills. We will experiment together to unfold the potential of easy-to-use, ready-to-hand and off-the-shelf media––such as paper-based modes of record, smartphones and digital platforms––and of various devices––such as participatory performances,  interactive documentaries and collaborative design processes––in order to elaborate the current prospects of multimodal ethnography. Hence, we will explore in detail how different multimodal strategies of field-working and description require us to reconsider: the materiality of fieldnotes (from words in notebooks to drawing and sketching, or audio-visual explorations using smartphones); ways to engage with multi-sensorialities, with digital habitats and their collaborative ecologies (blogs, pads, social networks); and how to undertake situated interventions and experiments, by designing devices, curating exhibitions and creating performances. In sum, paying attention to all this, we will provide a space for “serious fun” to playfully and critically explore a variety of ethnographic journeys and “effects”.

In order to elaborate with the students a shared vocabulary and a conceptual repertoire required to discuss and design further practical exercises, we will retrace some of the historical discussions around multimodality and its emergence as a field in our discipline. Hence, practical work will be regularly framed through theoretical discussions using texts from the post-Writing Culture moment, where forms of ethnographic authority and authorship, the predominance of observation as the main sensory engagement and the classic types of accounts and genres have been fundamentally challenged. Based on the legacy of those debates and drawing from contemporary cases, we will produce a practicable and workable framework in the form of an opening and an inventiveness of modes of field-working and experimenting with the multimodal politics of diverse genres of representation. Situating the written form among other forms of ethnographic materials, a more-than-textual anthropological work not only entails newer landscapes and avenues for anthropological practice, but also newer constraints, problems and predicaments.

maxime.le.calve@hu-berlin.de

ignacio.farias@hu-berlin.de

12.4. 2-4pm - Präsentation des Kurses 
19.4./3.5./17.5./31.5./14.6./28.6./12.7. 12-4pm - Regular Sessions (7)
 

 

Literatur

Cantarella, L., Hegel, C., & Marcus, G. E. (2019). Ethnography by Design: Scenographic Experiments in Fieldwork. London: Bloomsbury.

Causey, A. (2017). Drawn to See. Drawing as an ethnographic method. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Collins, S. G., & Durington, M. S. (2014). Networked Anthropology. New York: Routledge.

Collins, S. G., Durington, M., & Gill, H. (2017). Multimodality: An Invitation. American Anthropologist, 119(1), 142–146, https://doi.org/10.1111/aman.12826

Dattatreyan, E. G., & Marrero-Guillamón, I. (2019). Introduction: Multimodal Anthropology and the Politics of Invention. American Anthropologist. https://doi.org/10.1111/aman.13183  

Estalella & T. S. Criado (Eds.) (2018), Experimental Collaborations: Ethnography through Fieldwork Devices. New York: Berghahn.

Fabian, J. (2008). Ethnography as Commentary: Writing from the Virtual Archive. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Feder-Nadoff, M.A. (2019). Bodies of Knowledge: Towards an Anthropology of Making. Entanglements 2(1): 59–75.

Gubrium, A., & Harper, K. (2013). Participatory Visual and Digital Methods. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press.

Gunn, W. (Ed.). (2009). Fieldnotes and sketchbooks: Challenging the boundaries between descriptions and processes of describing. Frankfurt: Peter Lang.

Gunn, W., Otto, T., & Smith, R. C. (Eds.). (2013). Design Anthropology: Theory and Practice. London: Bloomsbury.

Ingold, T. (Ed.) (2011). Redrawing Anthropology: Materials, Movements, Lines. Anthropological Studies of Creativity and Perception. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 2011.

Ingold, T. (2013). Making: Anthropology, Archaeology, Art and Architecture. London: Routledge.

Law, J. (2004). After Method: Mess in Social Science Research. London: Routledge.

Lury, C., & Wakeford, N. (Eds.). (2012). Inventive Methods: The happening of the social. London: Routledge.

Marres, N., Guggenheim, M., & Wilkie, A. (Eds.). (2018). Inventing the Social. Manchester: Mattering Press.

Pandian, A. (2019). A Possible Anthropology: Methods for Uneasy Times. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Pink, S. (2007). Doing Visual Ethnography (2nd ed.). London: Sage.

Pink, S. (2009). Doing Sensory Ethnography. London: Sage.

Pussetti, C. (Ed.) (2018). Art-Based Ethnography: Experimental Practices of Fieldwork. Visual Ethnography, 7(1).

Rabinow, P., Marcus, G. E., Faubion, J. D., & Rees, T. (2008). Designs for an Anthropology of the Contemporary. Durham: Duke University Press

Rabinow, P. (2011). The Accompaniment: Assembling the Contemporary. Chicago: University Of Chicago Press.

Rosaldo, R., Lavie, S. & Narayan, K. (1993). Creativity/Anthropology. Cornell: Cornell University Press.

Sanjek, R., & Tratner, S. W. (Eds.). (2015). eFieldnotes: The makings of anthropology in the digital world. Philadelphia: Pennsylvania University Press.

Sansi, R. (Ed.) (2019). The Anthropologist as Curator. London: Bloomsbury.

Savransky, M. (2016). The Adventure of Relevance: An Ethics of Social Inquiry. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Smith, L. T. (1999). Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples. New York: Zed Books.

Smith, R. C., Vangkilde, K. T., Kjaersgaard, M. G., Otto, T., Halse, J., & Binder, T. (Eds.). (2016). Design Anthropological Futures. London: Bloomsbury.

Taussig, M. (2011). I Swear I Saw This: Drawings in Fieldwork Notebooks, Namely My Own. Chicago: University Of Chicago Press.

Underberg, N. M., & Zorn, E. (2013). Digital Ethnography: Anthropology, Narrative, and New Media. Austin: University of Texas Press.

von Oswald, M., & Tinius, J. (Eds.). (2020). Across Anthropology: Troubling Colonial Legacies, Museums, and the Curatorial. Leuven: Leuven University Press.

 

Strukturbaum

Keine Einordnung ins Vorlesungsverzeichnis vorhanden. Veranstaltung ist aus dem Semester SoSe 2021. Aktuelles Semester: SoSe 2024.
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