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Ethnographers spend a tremendous amount of time in the field, collecting all sorts of empirical material—but how do they turn their work into books or articles that people actually want to read? This concise, engaging guide will help academic writers at all levels to write better. Many
ethnography textbooks focus more on the ‘ethno’ portion of our craft, and less on developing our ‘graph’ skills. Gullion fills that gap, helping ethnographers write compelling, authentic stories about their fieldwork. From putting the first few words on the page, to developing a plot line, to publishing, Writing Ethnography offers guidance for all stages of the writing process.
Ethnographers spend a tremendous amount of time in the field, collecting all sorts of empirical material—but how do they turn their work into books or articles that people actually want to read? This concise, engaging guide will help academic writers at all levels to write better. Many
ethnography textbooks focus more on the ‘ethno’ portion of our craft, and less on developing our ‘graph’ skills. Gullion fills that gap, helping ethnographers write compelling, authentic stories about their fieldwork. From putting the first few words on the page, to developing a plot line, to publishing, Writing Ethnography offers guidance for all stages of the writing process.
Acknowledgments
List of Figures
About the Author
Introduction
1 Changes from the First Edition
1 On Ethnography
1 A (Very) Brief History of Ethnography
2 Why Ethnography?
3 Ethical Issues in Ethnographic Writing
4 Fieldnotes
2 On Storytelling
1 Types of Tales
2 Creative Nonfijiction in Ethnography
3 What Makes a Story Great?
4 Story Arcs
5 Vignettes
6 Evocative Storytelling
7 Vulnerability in Writing
8 Reflexivity and Difffraction
3 On Technical Considerations
1 Writing Rituals
2 Academic Fanfijiction
3 The Art of the Sentence
4 First, Second, or Third Person
5 Active/Passive
6 The Trouble with Adverbs
7 Audience
8 Show, Don’t Tell
9 Voice
10 Writing the Voices of Our Participants
11 Characters
12 Conversations
13 Metaphorically Speaking
14 Integrating the Literature
4 On Refinement
1 Editing
2 On Sounding Smart
3 What to Call This Thing?
5 On Writing as Process
1 Getting Started
2 Writing as Process
3 Writing as Inquiry
4 Doing the Unstuck
5 The Panic Attack
6 Framing and Publishing
7 Revise and Resubmit
8 Writing to Connect, Writing for Social Change
Appendix: Writing Prompts
References
Index
Jessica Smartt Gullion, PhD (2002), Texas Woman’s University, is the Associate Dean of Research for the College of Arts and Sciences at that university. She has written extensively on ethnography, including Diffractive Ethnography (Routledge, 2018), and the forthcoming Doing Ethnography (Guilford).
"Jessica Smartt Gullion writes with conversational, reader-friendly
prose about the craft and art of scholarly storytelling. She
expertly demonstrates how to follow the essential rules of academic
writing and how and when to break them. Dr. Gullion titles her work
with 'ethnography,' but the pragmatic guidance in this book also
applies to other genres of qualitative inquiry such as
phenomenology, case study, grounded theory, and autoethnography.
This is an essential resource for novice and veteran researchers to
enhance their written documentation of fieldwork, and an ideal
textbook for courses and workshops in scholarly composition." –
Johnny Saldaña, Professor Emeritus, Arizona State University,
author of The Coding Manual for Qualitative Researchers (now in its
fourth edition) and co-author of Qualitative Research: Analyzing
Life (second edition)
"Ethnographic fields are contested territories and terrains because
even as we ethnographers work and live in our fields, we carry them
with us wherever we go—in our notes, memories, dreams, reveries,
and bodies. We shuttle between here and there and here. We try to
translate between the ethnographic moments when and where we saw,
heard, felt and the ethnographic presents, when and where we are
seeing, hearing, and feeling, presently. Many things are lost, but
much newness is found in these temporal and geographical crossings.
Ethnographic writing is nothing if not an unruly dance, an
orchestral attempt to write in-between these crossings, an attempt
to untangle, in text or performance, what was experienced, what is
remembered, and what is to be written, in the ‘now.’ It is a kind
of writing that is always answering what I believe are two
questions that ethnographers like Jessica Smartt Gullion are
committed to—how to tell this story? And how to tell it well? In
Writing Ethnography, Gullion takes on the daunting task of how such
a dance can be led and be led with care and rigor. I highly
recommend this book to any student and practitioner of the
ethnographic method. It is much needed and essential." – Devika
Chawla, Professor of Communication Studies, Ohio University and
editor-in-chief of Departures in Critical Qualitative Research
"Writing Ethnography is engaging and accessible, yet still grounded
in solid scholarship—the essence of good public scholarship.
Gullion makes the mysterious process of writing a lot less
mysterious, and actually quite straightforward. She does this, in
part, by sharing her own relationship with writing, including the
banes of every writer—panic, writer’s block, and the academic’s
desire to sound smart which often obscures the whole point of
sharing the research. She also fills the book with concrete
examples, suggested approaches, and practical advice. The new
edition includes an expanded and extremely useful section on
editing (the most disregarded phase of writing). A particular
strength of the book is that Gullion speaks to the reader directly,
creating a connection that functions much like a trusted friend.
Her generous spirit spills off the page. She includes writing
prompts that help the reader to make concrete connections to the
points she is making. Finally, and perhaps most importantly,
Gullion emphasizes that all research, especially ethnography, is
basically about telling stories that matter. After all, as Thomas
King reminds us, the truth about stories is that’s all we are." –
Rosemary C. Reilly, PhD, Full Professor in the Department of
Applied Human Sciences, Concordia University, Montreal
"Jessica Smartt Gullion’s Writing Ethnography is a valuable
resource not only in my dance ethnography classes, but also in my
work with MA and PhD students at the thesis and dissertation
writing stage. The book provides pithy guidance for graduate
students and emerging scholars for transforming their data into
prose that transports readers into the field sites, bringing
research participants to life on the page. Writing Ethnography is a
beautiful and accessible primer on how to ‘show, don’t tell,’ and
produce polished, publishable work." – Rosemary Candelario, PhD,
Associate Professor of Dance, Texas Woman’s University and
co-editor of the forthcoming book Dance Research
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