Focusing on the unacknowledged, personal and often unconscious dimension,<i>Sex</i>explores the intersection between sex and ethnography. Anthropological writing tends to focus on the influence of status markers such as position, gender, ethnicity, and age on fieldwork. By contrast, far less attenti
Sex: Ethnographic Encounters
✍ Scribed by Richard Joseph Martin; Dieter Haller (editors)
- Publisher
- Bloomsbury Academic
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 233
- Series
- Encounters: Experience and Anthropological Knowledge
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Focusing on the unacknowledged, personal and often unconscious dimension, Sex explores the intersection between sex and ethnography. Anthropological writing tends to focus on the influence of status markers such as position, gender, ethnicity, and age on fieldwork. By contrast, far less attention has been paid to how sex, sexuality, eroticism, desire, attraction, and rejection affect ethnographic research.
In the book, anthropologists reflect on their own encounters with sex during fieldwork, revealing how attraction and desire influence the choice of fieldwork subjects, field sites and friendships. They also examine the resulting impact on fieldwork findings and the generation of knowledge. Based on fieldwork in Germany, Denmark, Greece, the USA, Brazil, South Africa, Singapore, Turkey, Israel, Morocco, and India, the contributors go beyond the common heterosexuality/homosexuality divide to address topics which include celibacy, polyamory and sadomasochism.
This long overdue text provides perspectives from a new generation of anthropologists and brings the debate into the 21st century. Examining challenging and controversial issues in contemporary fieldwork, this is essential reading for students in anthropology, gender and sexuality studies, sociology, research methods, and ethics courses.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover page
Halftitle page
Series page
Title page
Copyright page
Contents
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
Organization of chapters
Part One Institutions
1 Toward an Intimately “Impure” Ethnography: Considering the Limits of Non-Participant- Observation
2 When Bodies Talk: Indulging Ethnography
Acknowledgments
3 “She Goes with the Refugees”: Desire and Power Amid the Politics of Asylum in Greece
Encounters and crises
“You have lost your good mood”
“This woman who looks at everyone”
Vulnerability and desire
Eleftherios
“I’ve never been with a white girl”
Going with
Part Two Interpellations
4 A Camel Walks into a Brothel: Passing Anxieties in the Sexual Economies of Brazil
Boy trouble
Coke versus Fanta
The daily Grind(r)
Conclusion
5 The Anthropologist’s New Clothes: Ethnographic Exposure and BDSM
Research pants
Jeans, T-shirts, and interrogation chambers
Significant others: entanglement, exposure, and the ethnographer’s “I”
6 Dating a Gypsy Punk Musician: Cultural Appropriation and Ethnographic Fieldwork Among Brazilian Romanies
Part Three Intimacies
7 In Bed with My Informant (and Her Lover/s): Navigating Intimacy and Ethics in Singapore
Let’s all get comfortable
The erotic equation in fieldwork
“Know your boundaries”: The powerful art of seduction
Performing the gaze: Turning on, switching, and flirting back
Roman[ti]ci[z]ng the anthropologist
8 All Acts of Love and Pleasure are My Rituals: Fieldwork and Erotic Subjectivity in an American NeoPagan Community
NeoPaganism defi ned
My ethnographic position
NeoPaganism and sexuality
NeoPagan values and sex
Ethics
Ethnographer erotic subjectivity, or the witch stands alone
What’s love got to do with it? Or, what does studying sex tell us about NeoPaganism?
9 Invulnerable Men and Dangerous Women: Encountering HIV Risk Perception in Urban South Africa
Mission impossible?
Ideal partners
A public affair
Invulnerable men
Dangerous women
Viral divides
Beyond boundaries
Acknowledgments
10 Public Vegetarianism and Public Menstruation: Staging Chastity Among Jains in Gujarat1
Vegetarianism and chastity as basic conditions for pilgrimage and field research
Well-wishers and skeptics
Public vegetarianism and public celibacy
Public menstruation
Intricate encounters with male ascetics
Conclusion
Part Four Incommensurabilities
11 The Naked Fear: Desire and Identity in Morocco
Tangier as a place of longing
Nadir’s torment: From desire to identity
12 Faux Amis: On the Morals of Not Being Gay in Istanbul
13 Im/possibilities in the Field: Lessons from Jerusalem
Conflicting subjectivities
Passing in the field
Jerusalem Pride
Blood in the street
Memorial service
Blame it on pornography
Coda
Acknowledgment
14 Guide to Further Reading
Notes
References
Index
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