This volume examines some crucial issues in the conduct of fieldwork and
ethnography and provides new insights into the problems of constructing
anthropological knowledge. How is anthropological knowledge created from
fieldwork, whose knowledge is this, who determines what is of
significance in any ethnographic context, and how is the fieldsite
extended in both time and place?
Nine anthropologists examine these problems, drawing on diverse case
studies. These range from the dilemmas of the religious refashioning of
the ethnographer in contemporary Indonesia to the embodied knowledge of
ballet performers, and from ignorance about post-colonial ritual
innovations by the anthropologist in highland Papua to the skilled
visions of slow food producers in Italy. It is a key text for new
fieldworkers as much as for established researchers. The anthropological
insights developed here are of interdisciplinary relevance: cultural
studies scholars, sociologists and historians will be as interested as
anthropologists in this re-evaluation of fieldwork and the project of
ethnography.