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Living in the field: ethnographic experience of place

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2012

Peter Kellett
Affiliation:
Global Urban Research Unit, School of Architecture Planning and Landscape, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Claremont TowerNewcastle upon Tyne, ne1 7ru, UKp.w.kellett@ncl.ac.uk

Extract

In our daily life we draw heavily on our experiential interpretations of the places we inhabit through our work and domestic lives. Such understandings draw directly from the senses and our bodily engagement in space. In contrast, our analyses and interpretations of the places and sites of others often rely on a different range of skills in which ‘objectivity’ is privileged over personal responses. Such approaches usually rely on short visits in which hard ‘factual’ and visual data is collected quickly. Rarely in architectural or urban studies do researchers live ‘in the field’. This contrasts markedly with anthropology where time spent living in the field is regarded as essential, and such ethnographic studies gain credence and credibility through long periods of residence.

Type
theory
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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