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| About the Editors | p. x |
| Editors’ Acknowledgments | p. xi |
| Acknowledgments to Sources | p. xii |
| Fieldwork in Cultural Anthropology: An Introduction | p. 1 |
| Beginnings | p. 49 |
| Introduction | p. 51 |
| The Observation of Savage Peoples | p. 56 |
| The Methods of Ethnology | p. 63 |
| Method and Scope of Anthropological Fieldwork | p. 69 |
| ... MORE | p. 83 |
| Introduction | p. 85 |
| A Woman Going Native | p. 92 |
| Fixing and Negotiating Identities in the Field: The Case of Lebanese Shiites | p. 103 |
| Being Gay and Doing Fieldwork | p. 114 |
| Automythologies and the Reconstruction of Ageing | p. 124 |
| Fieldwork Relations and Rapport | p. 135 |
| Introduction | p. 137 |
| Champukwi of the Village of the Tapirs | p. 143 |
| Behind Many Masks: Ethnography and Impression Management | p. 153 |
| The Politics of Truth and Emotion among Victims and Perpetrators of Violence | p. 175 |
| The “Other” Talks Back | p. 191 |
| Introduction | p. 193 |
| Custer Died for Your Sins | p. 199 |
| Here Come the Anthros | p. 207 |
| When They Read What the Papers Say We Wrote | p. 210 |
| Ire in Ireland | p. 219 |
| Fieldwork Confl icts, Hazards, and Dangers | p. 235 |
| Introduction | p. 237 |
| Ethnology in a Revolutionary Setting | p. 244 |
| The Ethnographer’s Tale | p. 256 |
| Anthropology from the Bones: A Memoir of Fieldwork, Survival, and Commitment | p. 274 |
| Reflections on Managing Danger in Fieldwork: Dangerous Anthropology in Belfast | p. 283 |
| Fieldwork Ethics | p. 297 |
| Introduction 299 | p. 283 |
| The Life and Death of Project Camelot | p. 306 |
| Confronting the Ethics of Ethnography: Lessons From Fieldwork in Central America | p. 318 |
| Ethics versus “Realism” in Anthropology | p. 331 |
| Worms, Witchcraft and Wild Incantations: The Case of the Chicken Soup Cure | p. 353 |
| Code of Ethics (2009) American Anthropological Association | p. 359 |
| Multi-Sited Fieldwork | p. 365 |
| Introduction | p. 367 |
| Beyond “Culture”: Space, Identity, and the Politics of Difference | p. 374 |
| Afghanistan, Ethnography, and the New World Order | p. 387 |
| Being There … and There … and There! Reflections on Multi-Site Ethnography | p. 399 |
| A New Form of Collaboration in Cultural Anthropology: Matsutake Worlds Matsutake Worlds Research Group | p. 409 |
| Sensorial Fieldwork | p. 441 |
| Introduction | p. 443 |
| Balinese Character: A Photographic Analysis | p. 450 |
| The Taste of Ethnographic Things | p. 465 |
| Dialogic Editing: Interpreting How Kaluli Read Sound and Sentiment | p. 480 |
| On Rocks, Walks, and Talks in West Africa: Cultural Categories and an Anthropology of the Senses | p. 496 |
| Refl exive Ethnography | p. 511 |
| Introduction | p. 513 |
| Fieldwork and Friendship in Morocco | p. 520 |
| The Way Things Are Said | p. 528 |
| Transmutation of Sensibilities: Empathy, Intuition, Revelation | p. 540 |
| “At the Heart of the Discipline”: Critical Reflections on Fieldwork | p. 547 |
| Engaged Fieldwork | p. 563 |
| Introduction | p. 565 |
| Introduction - 1942 | p. 573 |
| Scholarship, Advocacy, and the Politics of Engagement in Burma (Myanmar) | p. 579 |
| “Human Terrain”: Past, Present and Future Applications | p. 593 |
| The Gaza Freedom Flotilla: Ethnographic Notes on “Othering Violence” | p. 605 |
| Key Ethnographic, Sociological, Qualitative, and Multidisciplinary Fieldwork Methods Texts | p. 612 |
| Edited Cultural Anthropology Volumes on Fieldwork Experiences | p. 615 |
| Reflexive Accounts of Fieldwork and Ethnographies Which Include Accounts of Fieldwork | p. 618 |
| Leading Cultural Anthropology Fieldwork Methods Texts | p. 620 |
| Early and Classic Anthropological Writings on Fieldwork, including Diaries and Letters | p. 622 |
| Index | p. 623 |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
Jeffrey A. Sluka is Associate Professor of Social Anthropology at Massey University, New Zealand. He is past Chair of the Association of Social Anthropologists of Aotearoa/New Zealand, a Fellow of the American Anthropological Association, author of Hearts and Minds, Water and Fish: Popular Support for the IRA and INLA in a Northern Irish Ghetto (1989), and editor of Death Squad: The Anthropology of State Terror (2000).