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CFP: Biography and the Ethnographic Interview
Life stories have long been recognised as a potentially effective medium for communicating a whole variety of lived experiences. Done well, such accounts enable concerns that stretch well beyond the individual whose life is studied - such as common experiences of AIDS in South Africa, the transition from socialism in Tanzania, or of leprosy in India - to be addressed in ways that are both grounded and accessible. In-depth interviews, often conducted over a lengthy period of time through intimate relationships with key informants also serve to challenge the findings of more straightforward case studies, which, by contrast, often follow particular, conventionalised narrative structures. Case studies can tell us a great deal about what is acceptable or otherwise in a particular social context, but they often tell us very little about the actual experiences of the people they set out to describe. More nuanced biographical accounts, by contrast, draw out that which is often counter-intuitive, and - read against a broader ethnographic grounding - tell us something more generalisable too. This panel invites papers from those who have used interviews with key informants to construct biographical accounts. In particular we wish to consider how such an approach can transcend conventional ethnographic accounts; the difficulties that might be encountered in using interviews to construct biographies; and whether they might provide ways of exploring other aspects of the ethnographic encounter, such as the relationship between the anthropologist and his or her field collaborators.
This panel will form part of the Association of Social Anthropologists’ annual conference, ASA10: The Interview - theory, practice, society, this year at Queen's University, Belfast, 13/04/2010 – 16/04/2010.
Panel convenors: James Staples and Isak Niehaus (Brunel University).
To submit an abstract online go into the ASA’s website [http://www.nomadit.co.uk/asa/asa10/panels.php5?PanelID=713], but time is running out… the CFP ends on 18 February!
Dr James Staples
Lecturer in Social Anthropology
School of Social Sciences
Brunel University
Uxbridge UB8 3PH
Tel: +44 (0) 1895 267412
Email: [log in to unmask]
Web: http://www.brunel.ac.uk/about/acad/sss/depts/anthropology/anth_staff/jamesstaples
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