In turn creative thinker and street flâneur, careful planner and
adventurer, empathic listener and distant voyeur, recluse writer and
active participant: the ethnographer is a multifaceted researcher of
social worlds and social life.
In this book, sociologists Sarah Daynes and Terry Williams team up to
explore the art of ethnographic research and the many complex decisions
it requires. Using their extensive fieldwork experience in the United
States and Europe, and hours spent in the classroom training new
ethnographers, they illustrate, discuss, and reflect on the key skills
and tools required for successful research, including research design,
entry and exit, participant observation, fieldnotes, ethics, and writing
up.
Covering both the theoretical foundations and practical realities of
ethnography, this highly readable and entertaining book will be
invaluable to students in sociology and other disciplines in which
ethnography has become a core qualitative research method.