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The authors of this book demonstrate that fieldwork is first and foremost a human pursuit. They draw upon published and unpublished accounts of fieldworkers' personal experiences to develop the thesis that an appreciation of fieldwork as a unique mode of inquiry depends upon an understanding of the role the human element plays in it. They analyze the processes involved when people study people firsthand, focusing upon the recurrent human problems that arise and must be solved. The human processes and problems, they argue, are common to all fieldwork, regardless of the disciplinary backgrounds or the specific interests of individual researchers.
Interpersonal relations. --- Social sciences --- Human relations --- Interpersonal relationships --- Personal relations --- Relations, Interpersonal --- Relationships, Interpersonal --- Social behavior --- Social psychology --- Object relations (Psychoanalysis) --- Fieldwork. --- Field work --- Methodology --- academia. --- anthropologists. --- anthropology. --- communication. --- community. --- confidentiality. --- fieldwork approach. --- fieldwork methods. --- fieldwork. --- folklore. --- grad school. --- graduate research. --- human element. --- information gathering. --- interview methods. --- interview questions. --- mutual learning. --- nonfiction. --- observer effect. --- reference. --- relationships. --- research methods. --- research subjects. --- researcher and subject. --- ritual. --- social science. --- sociology. --- trust.
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Sociology of culture --- Sociology of religion --- Ethnology. Cultural anthropology
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Folklore --- Methodology --- Philosophy
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