Home  /  Back to disciplines  /  Request exam/desk copy  /  Purchase  /  View cart  /  Checkout

 

Field Projects in Anthropology

A Student Handbook, Third Edition

 

Julia G. Crane and Michael V. Angrosino

 

Building on the success of previous editions, this latest edition continues to offer students a very practical, down-to-earth approach to the methods and key issues involved in dong ethnographic research. Although not intended as a complete manual of field techniques, it does present a series of fourteen projects that represent some of the most common data collection techniques used by anthropologists. In carrying out the projects, students learn something about how and when to apply such techniques, or variants of them, in the field situation. The authors’ clear and useful guidelines are a welcome rite of passage to developing this field experience. Imaginable, practical, versatile, and stimulating, this edition maintains the unique coverage of topics, illustrative approach, and succinctness that has made it a widely read book for nearly two decades. Most importantly, Field Projects in Anthropology, 3/E motivates students to learn about other cultures and to develop new perspectives about their own. The projects are clearly written, short enough and varied enough to hold the reader’s attention, and to the point. They are also versatile, allowing sufficient leeway to modify or amplify the method to suit individual research needs.

The Culture of the Sacred

Doing Cultural Anthropology, 2/E

Exploring Oral History

Projects in Ethnographic Research


 

$17.95 list, 200 pages

10-digit ISBN: 0-88133-685-8

13-digit ISBN: 978-0-88133-685-6

© 1992

Quantity:

 

Table of Contents

 

The Projects

1. Proxemics

2. Making Maps

3. Charting Kinship

4. Interviewing Informants

5. Participant Observation

6. Collecting Life Histories

7. Using Personal Documentation

8. Digging into Cultural History

9. Analyzing Folklore Content

10. Doing Ethnosemantic Research

11. Designing a Survey

12. Studying Formal Organization

13. Taking Photographs

14. Planning a Community Study