
FieldWorking Reading and Writing Research
by Sunstein, Bonnie Stone; Chiseri-Strater, Elizabeth-
Free Shipping on All Orders!
*excludes Marketplace items.
Buy Used
Rent Textbook
New Textbook
We're Sorry
Sold Out
eTextbook
We're Sorry
Not Available
How Marketplace Works:
- This item is offered by an independent seller and not shipped from our warehouse
- Item details like edition and cover design may differ from our description; see seller's comments before ordering.
- Sellers much confirm and ship within two business days; otherwise, the order will be cancelled and refunded.
- Marketplace purchases cannot be returned to eCampus.com. Contact the seller directly for inquiries; if no response within two days, contact customer service.
- Additional shipping costs apply to Marketplace purchases. Review shipping costs at checkout.
Summary
Author Biography
ELIZABETH CHISERI-STRATER is a professor of English at the University of North Carolina – Greensboro, where she teaches courses in rhetoric and composition, nonfiction writing, research methods, and English education. She has directed the Composition Program and served as director of graduate studies in the Women's and Gender Studies program.
Table of Contents
Stepping In: Revealing Our Subcultures
BOX 1: Looking at Subcultures
Investigating Perspectives: Insider and Outsider
Stepping Out: Making the Familiar Strange and the Strange Familiar
Horace Miner, “Body Ritual of the Nacirema”
BOX 2: Making the Ordinary Extraordinary
Posing Questions: Ethnographic vs Journalistic
* Lorraine Ahearn, “Folk ‘Cure’ Sold Locally High on Lead”
BOX 3: Engaging the Ethnographic Perspective
* Julie O’Donoghue, “Fairfax Residents Become U.S. Citizens”
Fieldworking with This Book
An Ethnographic Study: “Friday Night at Iowa 80”
Rick Zollo, “Friday Night at Iowa 80” (Student Project)
* Doing Research Online
FieldWriting: Establishing a Voice
A Community Action Study
Ivana Nikolic, “House for the Homeless: A Place to Hang Your Hat” (Student Project)
Reflection as Critique
The Research Portfolio: Definitions and Purpose
* Do This: Select a Fieldsite
BOX 4: Freewriting
FieldWriting: Point of View and Rhetoric
Keeping a Notebook
Joan Didion, “On Keeping a Notebook”
BOX 5: Exploratory Notetaking with a Group
Getting at the Details
Samuel H. Scudder, “Look at Your Fish”
BOX 6: Double-Entry Notes
Fieldnotes: The Key to Your Project
BOX 7: Sharing Your Initial Fieldnotes
Analyzing Your Fieldnotes
BOX 8: Questioning Your Fieldnotes
Amy Lambert, “Feng-Shui: Reflections on a Sociology Class” (Student Project)
Double Voiced FieldNotes
* H. L. “Bud” Goodall, “Representing Ethnographic Experiences”
The Research Portfolio: Reflecting on Your Fieldnotes
* Do This: Question Your Notes
Chapter III: Reading Self, Reading Cultures: Understanding Texts
Gloria Naylor, “Mama Day”
BOX 9: Responding to Text
Positioning: Reading and Writing About Yourself
BOX 10: Positioning Yourself
Understanding Positioning: Checking in on Yourself
BOX 11: Unlearning Our Privilege (Mimi Harvey)
Getting Permission
BOX 12: From Ethos to Ethics (Julie Cheville)
Reading an Object: The Cultural Artifact
* BOX 13: Reading an Artifact (Beth Campbell)
The Uses of Cultural Artifacts
Alice Walker, “Everyday Use”
Responding to Reading
BOX 14: FieldWorking Book Clubs (Kathleen Ryan)
FieldWriting: Published and Unpublished Written Sources
Reading Electronic Communities
* Fieldworking in a Changing Field
* Elise Wu, “Out Patient” (Student Project)
* Working with Online Communities
* BOX 15: Locating Online Cultures
The Research Portfolio: An Option for Rereading
* Do This: Read Your Fieldsite
Chapter IV: Researching Place: The Spatial Gaze
Jamaica Kincaid, “On Seeing Jamaica for the First Time”
BOX 16: Recalling a Sense of Place
Selective Perception
FieldWriting: The Grammar of Observation
BOX 17: Writing a Verbal Snapshot
Deepening Description Through Research
* Jeannie B. Thomas, “The Cemetery as marketplace in Salem, Massachusetts”
Learning How to Look: Mapping Space
BOX 18: Mapping Space
Learning How to Look: Finding a Focal Point
BOX 19: Finding a Focal Point
Learning How to Look: Identifying Unity and Tension
Karen Downing, “Strike a Pose” (Student Project)
Learning How to Look: Colonized Spaces
Jennifer Hemmingsen, “The Happy Canyon” (Student Project)
The Research Portfolio: Learning from Your Data
Karen Downing, “A Pose on ‘Strike a Pose’” (Portfolio Reflection)
* Do This: Map Your Space
Chapter V: Researching People: The Collaborative Listener
BOX 20: Using a Cultural Artifact: An Interview
Learning How to Listen
* Etiquette for Conducting an Interview
BOX 21: Establishing Rapport
Recording and Transcribing
Cindie Marshall, “Ralph’s Sports Bar” (Student Project)
BOX 22: Analyzing Your Interviewing Skills
The Informant’s Perspective: An Anthropologist on Mars
Oliver Sacks, “An Anthropologist on Mars”
Gathering Family Stories
BOX 23: Writing a Family Story
One Family Story: The Core and its Variants
Gathering Oral Histories
* Nancy Hauserman, “Taking Care”
* Dave Isay, “Listening is an Act of Love”
Jennette Edwards, “I Can Read and I Can Write” (online only)
BOX 24: Starting an Oral History
FieldWriting: Using Character, Setting, and Theme to Create a Portrait
BOX 25: Writing a Verbal Portrait
The Research Portfolio: Reflective Documentation
* Do This: Reflect on Researching People
Chapter VI: Researching Language: The Cultural Translator
* BOX 26: Observing Body Language: (Amie Ohlmann)
Linking Words and Culture
Lafcadio Hearn, “Cheek”
BOX 27: Listening for Words: Creating a Glossary
Using Insider Language in Your Writing
Words as Cultural Artifacts
Researching Occupation: Recording Insider Language
BOX 28: Describing Occupational Terms
Verbal Performance: Curses
BOX 29: Gathering Verbal Performances: Proverbs, Jokes, and Saying
Researching Urban Legends
* Ofelia Zapeda, “A Language Journey”
FieldWriting: Dialogue on the Page
The Research Portfolio: Synthesis
* Do This: Translate Your Work
Chapter VII: Searching Archives: Locating Culture
Family Archives
Edward Ball, “Slaves in the Family”
BOX 30: A Box about Boxes
Historical Archives
* University Archives
Museum Archives
BOX 31: Sorting Through Public Archives
Naomi Shihab Nye, “The Attic and its Nails”
Organizing Archival Material
Alternative Archives
Lars Eighner, “On Dumpster Diving”
BOX 32: Alternative Archives
Electronic Archives: Using the Internet
FieldWriting: Annotated Bibliographies
The Research Portfolio: Representing the Unflat Stuff
* Do This: Search the Fieldworking Archives
Chapter VIII: FieldWriting: From Down Draft to Up Draft
Anne LaMott, “Shitty First Drafts”
Questioning Your Draft
Thickening Your Draft
BOX 33: Listening to the Voices in Your Draft (David Seitz)
Representing Culture in Your FieldWriting
Crafting a Text
* William Harvey Purcell, “Disability is Beautiful”
FieldWriting: Analytic Section Headings
Revising for a Reader
Donald M. Murray, “Some Notes on Revision”
BOX 34: Sharing Data: Partners in Revision
The Research Portfolio: One-Page Analysis and Annotated Table of Contents
A Final Comment: Paying Attention to Writing
* Do This: Smooth Your Final Draft
Appendix A: MLA Documentation Guidelines
Appendix B: APA Documentation Guidelines
Appendix C: Works Cited and Recommended Readings
An electronic version of this book is available through VitalSource.
This book is viewable on PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and most smartphones.
By purchasing, you will be able to view this book online, as well as download it, for the chosen number of days.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.
A downloadable version of this book is available through the eCampus Reader or compatible Adobe readers.
Applications are available on iOS, Android, PC, Mac, and Windows Mobile platforms.
Please view the compatibility matrix prior to purchase.