Ethnographic film Essays

  • Ancient Man, Clovis

    2063 Words  | 5 Pages

    Jungle, are the only locations containing native people living in their traditional ways. All of the people living in these places have to live in a very specific way, or they simply cannot survive on what the land gives them. Of, course all of the ethnographic records we have show highly specialized people, we killed all the ones that lived where they could be more generalized and still survive. The archaeological record shows us what the intelligent ethnographers preach; there is more out there than

  • Postmodernism, Deconstructionism, and the Ethnographic Text

    5371 Words  | 11 Pages

    Postmodernism, Deconstructionism, and the Ethnographic Text Anthropology 575 Postmodernism In the late 1960’s the social sciences (mainly anthropology and sociology) entered a crisis period in which traditional ways of conducting the study of the Other were re-examined in the context of their association with dominance-submission hierarchies and the objectification of the subjects of study. There was seen to be an association between Western imperialism’s objectification of the

  • Ethnography

    1202 Words  | 3 Pages

    Cited Missing Reflexivity has recently been designated as an indicator of postmodernism in anthropological texts. In this context, the practice is attacked as self-indulgent narcissism, but its true scope reaches much further. While some ethnographic texts exhibit an overemphasis on the author, and his position within the work, this is one extreme of the range reflexivity, which also serves as a methodological tool, unincorporated into the writing, and as a means to account for the ethnographers

  • Ethnography

    894 Words  | 2 Pages

    understands the feelings of the people he/she is studying. I think that it is rather ambitious to state that emotion is univeral, and I do not think that it is the job of anthropologists to do so. The reflexive voice is a necessary aspect of ethnographic writing, but the anthropologist must be careful not to shift focus from concentrating on culture to concentrating on herself. Dorinne Kondo does an excellent job in her essay “Dissolution and Reconstitution of Self”in using the reflexive voice

  • Ethnography

    1625 Words  | 4 Pages

    individuals that they are writing about. Furthermore, many of these authors assume that the individuals among whom they are living and studying exemplify the entire society as a whole. Ethnographers have used many different means of establishing their ethnographic authority. One such method is the use of reflexivity in the ethnography. Ethnographers such as Renato Rosaldo in his work Culture and Truth: The Remaking of Social Analysis and Bronislaw Malinowski in his work Argonauts of the Western Pacific assume

  • Cultural Anthropology and Ethnographic Fieldwork

    1792 Words  | 4 Pages

    Cultural Anthropology and Ethnographic Fieldwork James P. Spradley (1979) described the insider approach to understanding culture as "a quiet revolution" among the social sciences (p. iii). Cultural anthropologists, however, have long emphasized the importance of the ethnographic method, an approach to understanding a different culture through participation, observation, the use of key informants, and interviews. Cultural anthropologists have employed the ethnographic method in an attempt to surmount

  • An Ethnographic Study of Social Change in Amish Society

    3335 Words  | 7 Pages

    An Ethnographic Study of Social Change in Amish Society On March 23, 1998, I carried out an interview and field observation to confirm a previous hypothesis on Amish social change and survival. I hypothesized, based on library research and personal experience, that Amish society was not static but dynamic and affected by many factors such as economics and cultural survival. In order to check the validity of my hypothesis I arranged to spend a full Sunday (March 23, 1998), with an Amish family

  • Understanding of the Self

    1944 Words  | 4 Pages

    external people (Thomas, 1996). The essay will provide a brief introduction to the theory of the self as presented by both perspectives, then compare and evaluate the explanation offered by them. SOCIAL CONSTRUCTIONIST AND PSYCHODYMIC PERSPECTIVE Ethnographic accounts of incongruent cultures as provided by anthropologist are used to defend the argument that the self is socially constructed through socialisation processes (Sapsford, 1996). For example, Markus and Kitayama proposed that with the existence

  • B.A.T.A.M: An Ethnographic Film Produced by Johan Lindquist

    1173 Words  | 3 Pages

    “B.A.T.A.M” is an ethnographic film produced by Johan Lindquist. It presents stories of two women who live on the Indonesian island of Batam. Wati, one of the major participants of the interview is a young female factory worker. Another major participant, Dewi, who came from Java and used to work in an electronic factory, is currently working as a prostitute. The film primarily shows how the “multinational capitalism and migration interact in the shadowlands of globalization”. In my analysis, I will

  • Kung Bushman

    1035 Words  | 3 Pages

    organization. Although they have been extensively studied, Howell also proclaims, “It is surely illegitimate to use them as though they are the prototypical hunter-gatherers, knowledge of whom tells us all we need to know in order to apply the ethnographic analogy to models of prehistoric life.” Wild, maniac, unsophisticated, uneducated, vulgar…these are all words that come to mind when I think of prehistoric or primitive. Obviously the !Kung tribe have grown with the rest of society. How are we

  • Use of Reflexivity in Ethnographic Research

    991 Words  | 2 Pages

    Use of Reflexivity in Ethnographic Research Works Cited Missing The use of reflexivity in ethnographic research and writing is used to insist that the anthropologist has systematically and rigorously revealed their methodology and their self as the instrument of data collection and generation. Reflexivity can play a variety of roles in ethnographic writings as observed in the works of Renato Rosaldo, Dorinne Kondo, and Ruth Behar. These three anthropologists all use reflexivity in different

  • The Role of Reflexivity in Ethnography

    1389 Words  | 3 Pages

    its most obvious form (or at least the form most obvious to me), reflexivity is manifest in the practice of an ethnographer including herself in her own ethnographic research---seeing herself not as an “unbiased, impartial” (Malinowski 18) observer, but as an essential and un-removable part of her study. The effect of reflexivity on ethnographic writing has been, however, much broader than just that. It signals “a departure from the ideology of objectivity [and] distance” which for so long pervaded

  • Reflexivity

    1257 Words  | 3 Pages

    write. They participate and observe in order to produce ethnographies. While some anthropologists venture to “exotic” lands to study the “natives,” others conduct ethnographic research within their own culture. Despite the diverse cultures they examine and the use of a tape recorder instead of a pen and a notebook, the ethnographic process is virtually the same. Or is it? Although similarities between ethnographies exist, when it comes down to it, ethnographies differ from one anthropologist

  • Reflexivity in Ethnographic Research and Writing

    1614 Words  | 4 Pages

    Reflexivity in Ethnographic Research and Writing The role of reflexivity in ethnographic research and writing has certain advantages and limits, as it gives the discipline of anthropology another form of interpreting ethnographies. Reflexivity, in terms of work of anthropology, is to insist that anthropologists systematically and rigorously reveal their methodology and themselves as the instrument of data generation. It is the self-consciousness or the work's ability to see itself as a work

  • The Pros and Cons of Ethnographic Reflexivity

    847 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Advantages and Limits of Ethnographic Reflexivity Awareness of writing choices generates an appreciation of the reflexivity of ethnographic research. Reflexivity involves the recognition that an account of reality does not simply mirror reality but rather creates or constitutes as real in the first place whatever it describes. Thus ‘the notion of reflexivity recognizes that texts do not simply and transparently report an independent order of reality. Rather, the texts themselves are implicated

  • The Power Struggle at the Occidental Child Development

    4286 Words  | 9 Pages

    The Power Struggle at the Occidental Child Development I have conducted ethnographic research at the Occidental Child Development Center where I have spent many hours participating and observing with the children of the center. I am not an outsider to this center, because I have been working with this particular bunch of children for a year, so I am well accepted when I asked to join in the games with the children. The center has a total 45 preschool students aging from 2-5 years old and

  • Reflection Of The Last Supper

    2320 Words  | 5 Pages

    of his manipulation of time and space and unique visual language, which aesthetically renegotiate the firm categorizations of ethnographic and avant-garde cinema. By focusing on the uniqueness of “Gardner’s

  • Nanook Of The South Analysis

    1671 Words  | 4 Pages

    here?” The nature of this statement is to ridicule the townspeople as to how there are so deplorable, they have no right to mingle with the ‘civilized folk’ for they are too dirty and stupid. Flaherty and Buñuel both criticize people through their film, because their value system and how their society works is different. A specific example of this in Nanook of the North is when Nyla was showing off either her baby or husky named Rainbow about four months old. There is no differentiation of who Rainbow

  • Film Analysis: Nanook Of The North

    1824 Words  | 4 Pages

    documentary filmmakers Jill Godmilow and Ann-Louise Shapiro stated, “documentary film... is one of the "discourses of sobriety" that include science, economics, politics, and history-discourses that claim to describe the "real," to tell the truth.” (Godmilow & Shaprio, 1997, pg.80). Although documentaries are presumed to represent the realities of the world, questions of truth, and more specifically, how “real” a film is, are inherent to the form. With this in mind, this essay aims to critically analyze

  • Comparing The Hunters And Dead Birds

    798 Words  | 2 Pages

    Going into the class, I thought that all the films we would watch in class would be like Marshall’s The Hunters and Gardner’s Dead Birds. That is to say I expected the class to focus on films about people in remote and exotic locations, with the “voice of God” narration telling me what to think about what I was watching. Fortunately, I was mistaken, and I learned a lot about a variety of film styles, methods, and approaches. However, I think that the films we viewed towards the middle of the semester