In the 1980s, George Marcus spearheaded a major critique of
cultural anthropology, expressed most clearly in the landmark book
Writing Culture, which he coedited with James Clifford. Ethnography
through Thick and Thin updates and advances that critique for the
late 1990s. Marcus presents a series of penetrating and provocative
essays on the changes that continue to sweep across anthropology.
He examines, in particular, how the discipline's central practice
of ethnography has been changed by "multi-sited" approaches to
anthropology and how new research patterns are transforming
anthropologists' careers. Marcus rejects the view, often expressed,
that these changes are undermining anthropology. The combination of
traditional ethnography with scholarly experimentation, he argues,
will only make the discipline more lively and diverse.
The book is divided into three main parts. In the first, Marcus
shows how ethnographers' tradition of defining fieldwork in terms
of peoples and places is now being challenged by the need to study
culture by exploring connections, parallels, and contrasts among a
variety of often seemingly incommensurate sites. The second part
illustrates this emergent multi-sited condition of research by
reflecting it in some of Marcus's own past research on Tongan
elites and dynastic American fortunes. In the final section, which
includes the previously unpublished essay "Sticking with
Ethnography through Thick and Thin," Marcus examines the evolving
professional culture of anthropology and the predicaments of its
new scholars. He shows how students have increasingly been drawn to
the field as much by such powerful interdisciplinary movements as
feminism, postcolonial studies, and cultural studies as by
anthropology's own traditions. He also considers the impact of
demographic changes within the discipline--in particular the fact
that anthropologists are no longer almost exclusively
Euro-Americans studying non-Euro-Americans. These changes raise new
issues about the identities of anthropologists in relation to those
they study, and indeed, about what is to define standards of
ethnographic scholarship.
Filled with keen and highly illuminating observations,
"Ethnography through Thick and Thin" will stimulate fresh debate
about the past, present, and future of a discipline undergoing
profound transformations.
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