This article reviews a range of difficult issues that currently face ethnographic research, and offers some reflections on them. These issues include: how ethnographers define the spatial and temporal boundaries of what they study; how they determine the context that is appropriate for understanding it; in what senses ethnography can be—or is—virtual rather than actual; the role of interviews as a data source; the relationship between ethnography and discourse analysis; the tempting parallel with imaginative writing; and, finally, whether ethnography should have, or can avoid having, political or practical commitments of some kind, beyond its aim of producing value-relevant knowledge.
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Martyn Hammersley
Welch Foundation
Ethnography & Education
The Open University
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Martyn Hammersley (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d9d31e9a6164e50fa3d79e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/17457820500512697