Home: Ethnographic Encounters - Encounters: Experience and Anthropological Knowledge (Hardback)
  • Home: Ethnographic Encounters - Encounters: Experience and Anthropological Knowledge (Hardback)
zoom

Home: Ethnographic Encounters - Encounters: Experience and Anthropological Knowledge (Hardback)

(editor), (editor)
£105.00
Hardback 256 Pages
Published: 28/11/2019
Notify me when available

Stay one step ahead and let us notify you when this item is next available to order.

How are notions of ‘home’ made and negotiated by ethnographers? And how does the researcher relate to forms of home encountered during fieldwork? Rather than searching for an abstract, philosophical understanding of home, this collection asks how home gains its meaning and significance through ongoing efforts to create, sustain or remake a sense of home. The volume explores how researchers and informants alike are always involved in the process of making and unmaking home, and challenges readers to reimagine ethnographic practice in terms of active, morally complex process of home-making. Contributions reach across the globe and across social contexts, and the book includes chapters on council housing and middle-class apartment buildings, homelessness and migration, problems with accessing the field as well as limiting it, physical as well as sentimental notions of home, and objects as well as inter-human social relations. Home draws attention to processes of sociality that normally remain analytically invisible, and contributes to a growing and rich field of study on the anthropology of home.

Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN: 9781350115941
Number of pages: 256
Weight: 560 g
Dimensions: 234 x 156 mm


MEDIA REVIEWS

This bookmakes a timely and distinctive contribution to resurgent anthropological interest in ‘home’: timely, because its enriches our understanding of how people make home when their lives are frequently punctuated by mobility, precarity and displacement; and distinctive, because of its reflections on how the study of home-making relates to the ethnographer’s efforts to either do anthropology ‘at home’, or make a home for themselves in an unfamiliar place. - Catherine Locke, University of East Anglia, UK

You may also be interested in...

Purity and Danger
Added to basket
Paperback
£16.99
The English
Added to basket
Paperback
£12.99
Guns, Germs and Steel
Added to basket
War: What is it good for?
Added to basket
Sapiens
Added to basket
Paperback
£12.99
Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology
Added to basket
Consider the Fork
Added to basket
Paperback
£10.99
A Dictionary of Sociology
Added to basket
The Challenge for Africa
Added to basket
The Golden Bough
Added to basket
The World Until Yesterday
Added to basket
Watching the English
Added to basket
Paperback
£10.99
Landscape and Memory
Added to basket

Please sign in to write a review

Your review has been submitted successfully.