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Plenty of books tell you how to do research. This book helps you
figure out WHAT to research in the first place, and why it matters.
The hardest part of research isn't answering a question. It's
knowing what to do before you know what your question is. Where
Research Begins tackles the two challenges every researcher faces
with every new project: How do I find a compelling problem to
investigate-one that truly matters to me, deeply and personally?
How do I then design my research project so that the results will
matter to anyone else? This book will help you start your new
research project the right way for you with a series of simple yet
ingenious exercises. Written in a conversational style and packed
with real-world examples, this easy-to-follow workbook offers an
engaging guide to finding research inspiration within yourself, and
in the broader world of ideas. Read this book if you (or your
students): have difficulty choosing a research topic know your
topic, but are unsure how to turn it into a research project feel
intimidated by or unqualified to do research worry that you're
asking the wrong questions about your research topic have plenty of
good ideas, but aren't sure which one to commit to feel like your
research topic was imposed by someone else want to learn new ways
to think about how to do research. Under the expert guidance of
award-winning researchers Thomas S. Mullaney and Christopher Rea,
you will find yourself on the path to a compelling and meaningful
research project, one that matters to you-and the world.
Technology scholars declare an emergency: attention must be paid to
the inequality, marginalization, and biases woven into our
technological systems. This book sounds an alarm: we can no longer
afford to be lulled into complacency by narratives of
techno-utopianism, or even techno-neutrality. We should not be
reassured by such soothing generalities as human error, virtual
reality, or the cloud. We need to realize that nothing is virtual:
everything that happens online, virtually, or autonomously happens
offline first, and often involves human beings whose labor is
deliberately kept invisible. Everything is IRL. In Your Computer Is
on Fire, technology scholars train a spotlight on the inequality,
marginalization, and biases woven into our technological systems.
Plenty of books tell you how to do research. This book helps you
figure out WHAT to research in the first place, and why it matters.
The hardest part of research isn't answering a question. It's
knowing what to do before you know what your question is. Where
Research Begins tackles the two challenges every researcher faces
with every new project: How do I find a compelling problem to
investigate-one that truly matters to me, deeply and personally?
How do I then design my research project so that the results will
matter to anyone else? This book will help you start your new
research project the right way for you with a series of simple yet
ingenious exercises. Written in a conversational style and packed
with real-world examples, this easy-to-follow workbook offers an
engaging guide to finding research inspiration within yourself, and
in the broader world of ideas. Read this book if you (or your
students): have difficulty choosing a research topic know your
topic, but are unsure how to turn it into a research project feel
intimidated by or unqualified to do research worry that you're
asking the wrong questions about your research topic have plenty of
good ideas, but aren't sure which one to commit to feel like your
research topic was imposed by someone else want to learn new ways
to think about how to do research. Under the expert guidance of
award-winning researchers Thomas S. Mullaney and Christopher Rea,
you will find yourself on the path to a compelling and meaningful
research project, one that matters to you-and the world.
China is a vast nation comprised of hundreds of distinct ethnic
communities, each with its own language, history, and culture.
Today the government of China recognizes just 56 ethnic
nationalities, or "minzu, " as groups entitled to representation.
This controversial new book recounts the history of the most
sweeping attempt to sort and categorize the nation's enormous
population: the 1954 Ethnic Classification project ("minzu
shibie"). Thomas S. Mullaney draws on recently declassified
material and extensive oral histories to describe how the communist
government, in power less than a decade, launched this process in
ethnically diverse Yunnan. Mullaney shows how the government drew
on Republican-era scholarship for conceptual and methodological
inspiration as it developed a strategy for identifying "minzu" and
how non-Party-member Chinese ethnologists produced a "scientific"
survey that would become the basis for a policy on nationalities.
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