The unbearable impossibility of fieldwork: ethnographic dilemmas, moral laboratories and narrative phenomenology

Writing ethnography is a creative experience. It produces outputs and, more importantly, it leaves traces. However, such creativity is of a particular kind, for it is mutually poietic. Objects are subjects, and the practice of fieldwork makes and re-makes subjects in unexpected and indec...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Maggio, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Anthropological Society of Oxford 2016
_version_ 1811140968705949696
author Maggio, R
author_facet Maggio, R
author_sort Maggio, R
collection OXFORD
description Writing ethnography is a creative experience. It produces outputs and, more importantly, it leaves traces. However, such creativity is of a particular kind, for it is mutually poietic. Objects are subjects, and the practice of fieldwork makes and re-makes subjects in unexpected and indecipherable ways. From this perspective, therefore, understanding the other, knowing the world and being ethically engaged with both appear ephemeral and, as a consequence, fundamentally unsubstantial. It is as if ethnography initiated a set of possibilities while at the same time incorporating these as impossibilities. In this sense I take ethnography to be utopian because its aims are inherently unattainable: looking at the world through the eyes of the other, pretending to do so without hijacking the other’s perspective and establishing an ethical relationship of mutuality and fairness is always impossible in the concrete, everyday practice of ethnographers. In this article, I intend to explore this utopian character throughout the examination of three themes: the unattainable perfection of inter-subjectivity, the unattainable perfection of epistemology in the social sciences, and the unattainable perfection of the ethic of fieldwork.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T05:07:18Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:da5e05a6-2585-472f-b614-ae06f5f1de26
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:30:25Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Anthropological Society of Oxford
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:da5e05a6-2585-472f-b614-ae06f5f1de262024-08-24T11:41:58ZThe unbearable impossibility of fieldwork: ethnographic dilemmas, moral laboratories and narrative phenomenologyJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:da5e05a6-2585-472f-b614-ae06f5f1de26EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordAnthropological Society of Oxford2016Maggio, RWriting ethnography is a creative experience. It produces outputs and, more importantly, it leaves traces. However, such creativity is of a particular kind, for it is mutually poietic. Objects are subjects, and the practice of fieldwork makes and re-makes subjects in unexpected and indecipherable ways. From this perspective, therefore, understanding the other, knowing the world and being ethically engaged with both appear ephemeral and, as a consequence, fundamentally unsubstantial. It is as if ethnography initiated a set of possibilities while at the same time incorporating these as impossibilities. In this sense I take ethnography to be utopian because its aims are inherently unattainable: looking at the world through the eyes of the other, pretending to do so without hijacking the other’s perspective and establishing an ethical relationship of mutuality and fairness is always impossible in the concrete, everyday practice of ethnographers. In this article, I intend to explore this utopian character throughout the examination of three themes: the unattainable perfection of inter-subjectivity, the unattainable perfection of epistemology in the social sciences, and the unattainable perfection of the ethic of fieldwork.
spellingShingle Maggio, R
The unbearable impossibility of fieldwork: ethnographic dilemmas, moral laboratories and narrative phenomenology
title The unbearable impossibility of fieldwork: ethnographic dilemmas, moral laboratories and narrative phenomenology
title_full The unbearable impossibility of fieldwork: ethnographic dilemmas, moral laboratories and narrative phenomenology
title_fullStr The unbearable impossibility of fieldwork: ethnographic dilemmas, moral laboratories and narrative phenomenology
title_full_unstemmed The unbearable impossibility of fieldwork: ethnographic dilemmas, moral laboratories and narrative phenomenology
title_short The unbearable impossibility of fieldwork: ethnographic dilemmas, moral laboratories and narrative phenomenology
title_sort unbearable impossibility of fieldwork ethnographic dilemmas moral laboratories and narrative phenomenology
work_keys_str_mv AT maggior theunbearableimpossibilityoffieldworkethnographicdilemmasmorallaboratoriesandnarrativephenomenology
AT maggior unbearableimpossibilityoffieldworkethnographicdilemmasmorallaboratoriesandnarrativephenomenology