List of illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Foreword. collaboration mode 3: a found condition of anthropological field research -- Today ... and what might be made of it -- George e. marcus -- Introduction. experimental collaborations -- Tomás sánchez criado and adolfo estalella -- Experimenting with data: 'collaboration' as method and practice in an -- Interdisciplinary public health project -- Emma garnett -- The 'research traineeship': the ups and downs of para-siting ethnography -- Maria schiller -- Finding one's rhythm: a 'tour de force' of fieldwork on the road with a band -- Anna lisa ramella -- Idiotic encounters: experimenting with collaborations between ethnography and -- Design -- Andrea gaspar -- Fieldwork as interface: digital technologies, moral worlds and zones of encounter -- Karen waltorp -- Thrown into collaboration: an ethnography of transcript authorization -- Alexandra kasatkina, zinaida vasilyeva, and roman khandozhko -- A cultural cyclotron: ethnography, art experiments, and a challenge of moving -- Towards the collaborative in rural poland -- Tomasz rakowski -- Making fieldwork public: repurposing ethnography as a hosting platform in -- Hackney wick, london -- Isaac marrero-guillamón -- Afterword. refiguring collaboration and experimentation -- Sarah pink -- Index.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Anthropology has historically consolidated its ethnographic mode of knowledge production around participant observation: a social and epistemic situation of fieldwork involvement maintaining a certain detachment and distance. Grounded in a series of diverse ethnographic projects in Africa, America and Europe, experimental collaboration expands our ethnographic repertoire of fieldwork devices beyond participant observation: fieldwork is carried out in collaboration with our counterparts in the field, creating an ethnographic mode whose epistemic practice is experimental and whose social engagement in the field is collaborative.