Projects per year
Abstract
This chapter addresses how remix functions as a generative metaphor for thinking
about ethnographic research methods. By dismantling and reconfiguring past
(mostly taken for granted) terminology for ‘what counts’ as appropriate data,
research practices, and research products, scholars can explore the potential for
ethnography to move beyond what is happening in the present or has happened
in the past and reach into possible futures.
about ethnographic research methods. By dismantling and reconfiguring past
(mostly taken for granted) terminology for ‘what counts’ as appropriate data,
research practices, and research products, scholars can explore the potential for
ethnography to move beyond what is happening in the present or has happened
in the past and reach into possible futures.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Anthropologies and futures : researching emerging and uncertain worlds |
Editors | Juan Francisco Salazar, Sarah Pink, Andrew Irving, Johannes Sjöberg |
Number of pages | 18 |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Academic |
Publication date | 2017 |
Pages | 225-242 |
Chapter | 14 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781474264907 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781474264907 |
Publication status | Published - 2017 |
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Digital Research Methods & Data Ethics
Markham, A. (PI), Tiidenberg, K. (Collaborator), Lanzeni, D. (Collaborator), Rehder, M. M. (Collaborator), Hakim-Fernandez, N. (Collaborator) & Gammelby, A. K. L. (Collaborator)
18/11/2013 → …
Project: Research
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Creating digital artifacts for future historians and archeologists
Markham, A. (Award holder)
01/01/2016 → 29/02/2020
Project: Research