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Focusing on issues of empathy and mutuality, and self and other, as
experienced in the everyday challenges of doing
participant-observation fieldwork, this volume makes a significant
contribution to rethinking the experiential and conceptual
construction of the field. The contributors adopt a critical and
self reflexive approach that goes beyond issues of voice and
representation raised by early postmodern anthropology, to grapple
with issues concerning the nature of knowledge transmission that
lie at the very heart of the ethnographic effort. They explore how
multiple modes of attending, awareness and sense making can shape
the ethnographic process. Of note are those unanticipated, less
palpable forms of communication that are peripheral to or transcend
more formalized and structured research methods and agendas. Among
these are empathy, intuition, somatic modes of attention and/or
embodied knowledge and identification, as well as, shared sensory
experiences and aesthetics. By the elaboration of such concepts the
volume as a whole offers a substantial elaboration of a
phenomenological approach.
"Twins Talk ...is a valuable and much needed contribution to
scholarly work on twins. It suggests intriguing new directions for
anthropological research on a topic that has been predominantly
explored from biomedical and psychological perspectives...With this
book, Davis gives a compelling demonstration of the value of
studying twins as twins, and shows that twins' life stories-not
just their genomes-are rich with meaning and worthy of analysis."
-Medical Anthropology QuarterlyTwins Talk is an ethnographic study
of identical twins in the United States, a study unique in that it
considers what twins have to say about themselves, instead of what
researchers have written about them. It presents, in the first
person, the grounded and practical experiences of twins as they
engage, both individually and together, the "who am I" and "who are
we" questions of life. Here, the twins themselves are the stars.
Dona Lee Davis conducted conversational interviews with twenty-two
sets of identical twins attending the Twins Days Festival in
Twinsburg, Ohio, the largest such gathering in the world. Lively
and often opinionated, each twin comes through as a whole person
who at the same time maintains a special bond that the vast
majority of people will never experience. The study provides a
distinctive and enlightening insider's challenge to the
nature/nurture debates that dominate contemporary research on
twins. The author, herself an identical twin, draws on aspects of
her own life to inform her analysis of the data throughout the
text. Each chapter addresses a different theme from multiple
viewpoints, including those of popular science writers, scientific
researchers, and singletons, as well as those of the twins
themselves.
"Twins Talk ...is a valuable and much needed contribution to
scholarly work on twins. It suggests intriguing new directions for
anthropological research on a topic that has been predominantly
explored from biomedical and psychological perspectives...With this
book, Davis gives a compelling demonstration of the value of
studying twins as twins, and shows that twins' life stories-not
just their genomes-are rich with meaning and worthy of analysis."
-Medical Anthropology QuarterlyTwins Talk is an ethnographic study
of identical twins in the United States, a study unique in that it
considers what twins have to say about themselves, instead of what
researchers have written about them. It presents, in the first
person, the grounded and practical experiences of twins as they
engage, both individually and together, the "who am I" and "who are
we" questions of life. Here, the twins themselves are the stars.
Dona Lee Davis conducted conversational interviews with twenty-two
sets of identical twins attending the Twins Days Festival in
Twinsburg, Ohio, the largest such gathering in the world. Lively
and often opinionated, each twin comes through as a whole person
who at the same time maintains a special bond that the vast
majority of people will never experience. The study provides a
distinctive and enlightening insider's challenge to the
nature/nurture debates that dominate contemporary research on
twins. The author, herself an identical twin, draws on aspects of
her own life to inform her analysis of the data throughout the
text. Each chapter addresses a different theme from multiple
viewpoints, including those of popular science writers, scientific
researchers, and singletons, as well as those of the twins
themselves.
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