How are notions of 'home' made and negotiated by ethnographers? And how does the researcher relate to forms of home encountered during fieldwork?
Inhaltsverzeichnis
AcknowledgementsList of ContributorsPreface, Steve Gudeman, University of Minnesota, USA0. Introduction: Ethnography, Dwelling and Home-Making, Johannes Lenhard, University of Cambridge, UK and Farhan Samanani, University of Oxford, UK 1. Studying Gay Sex in Beirut: The Lascivious Suture of Home/Field, Mathew Gagné, University of Toronto, Canada 2. Curtains, Cars, and Privacy: Experiences of Dwelling and Home-Making in Azerbaijan, Sascha Roth, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Germany 3. A Lonely Home: Balancing Intimacy and Estrangement in the Field, Nikita Simpson, London School of Economics, UK4. Ethnography of Police 'Domestic Abuse' Interventions: Ethico-Methodological Reflections, Faten Khazaei, University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland5. Digging Holes, Posting Signs, Loading Guns: Constructing Home in Grand Canyon, Arizona, Susannah Crockford, Ghent University, Belgium6. Becoming a Planner: Participation and Anticipation in Producing Home, Martin Fuller, Technische Universität Berlin, Germany7. Making a Home with Homeless People, Johannes Lenhard, University of Cambridge, UK8. A Threshold Space - Connecting a Home in the City with the City, Max Ott, TU Muenchen, Germany9. Making a Home on a Volcano, Adam Bobbette, University of New South Wales, Australia10. After the Eviction: Navigating Ambiguity in the Ethnographic Field, Farhan Samanani, University of Oxford, UK11. Acts of "Homing" in the Eastern Desert, How Syrian Refugees Make Temporary Homes in a Village Outside Zaatari Camp, Jordan, Ann-Christin Wagner, University of Edinburgh, UK12. A House Divided: Movement and Race in Urban Ethnography, Melissa K. Wrapp, University of California, Irvine, USABibliography Index