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Interloper: Lessons from Resistance in the Field [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 208 pages, height x width: 216x140 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Apr-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Princeton University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0691255369
  • ISBN-13: 9780691255361
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 111,94 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 208 pages, height x width: 216x140 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Apr-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Princeton University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0691255369
  • ISBN-13: 9780691255361
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

A practical and theoretical guide for field researchers struggling with access

Resistance is the bane of all field researchers, who are often viewed as interlopers when they enter a community and start asking questions. People obstruct investigations and hide evidence. They shelve complaints, silence dissent, and even forget their own past and deny having done so. How can we learn about a community when its members resist so strongly? The answer is that the resistance itself is sometimes the key.

Michel Anteby explains how community members often disclose more than intended when they close ranks and create obstacles. He draws insights from diverse stories of resistance by uncooperative participants—from Nazi rocket scientists and Harvard professors to Disney union busters and people who secure cadavers for medical school dissection—to reveal how field resistance manifests itself and how researchers can learn from it. He argues that many forms of resistance are retrospectively telling, and that these forms are the routine products, not by-products, of the field. That means that resistance mechanisms are not only indicative of something else happening; instead, they often are the very data points that can shed light on how participants make sense of their worlds.

An essential guide for ethnographers, sociologists, and all field researchers seeking access, The Interloper shares practical and theoretical insights into the value of having the door slammed in your face.

Recenzijas

"Wide-ranging. . . . [ D]efensiveness can, of course, be frustrating for researchers. What The Interloper demonstrates is that it can also offer a vital tool for uncovering the very things people most want to keep hidden."---Matthew Reisz, Times Higher Education "Anteby is a great storyteller. . . . He offers many lively examples of his trials and tribulations in accessing various fields in his ethnographic projects, punctuated by self-deprecating comments and humor. . . . Exemplifying this move between a personal, local, historically bound experience and the general insights it may yield, Antebys [ The Interloper] attests to the ethnographic tradition at its best."---Tammar B. Zilber, Administrative Science Quarterly "A significant contribution. . . . Amid contemporary struggles with diversity, equity, and inclusion, Antebys reflections carve out space for those of us who have not historically been held up, and even have been actively resisted and thereby marginalized, by the worlds constituting our everyday. He shows how such personal experiences with resistance through marginalization may, in fact, uniquely position us to understand others in a world that has increasingly valued the ability to do so. Said otherwise, he honors the interloper in all of us, encouraging us along the way to honor it within ourselves as well."---Kevin Woojin Lee, ILR Review

Michel Anteby is professor of management and organizations and (by courtesy) of sociology at Boston University. He is the author of Manufacturing Morals: The Values of Silence in Business School Education and Moral Gray Zones: Side Productions, Identity, and Regulation in an Aeronautic Plant (Princeton).