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Comparative Ethnographies: A Study of Religion and Change. Sarah Peters Anthropological Methodology. Comparative Ethnography. Mama Lola: A Vodou Priestess in Brooklyn Karen McCarthy Brown The Afterlife is Where We Come From: The Culture of Infancy in West Africa Alma Gottlieb
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Comparative Ethnographies: A Study of Religion and Change Sarah Peters Anthropological Methodology
Comparative Ethnography • Mama Lola: A Vodou Priestess in Brooklyn • Karen McCarthy Brown • The Afterlife is Where We Come From: The Culture of Infancy in West Africa • Alma Gottlieb • Performing Dreams: Discourse of Immortality Among the Xavante of Central Brazil • Laura R. Graham
Why These Ethnographies? • Symbolic Approach • Religion • Awareness of historical influences
The Ethnographers • Karen McCarthy Brown • Specializes in Haitian and Religious studies • Strong feminist and postmodern theory • Alma Gottlieb • Specializes in West Africa (Beng), Religious, and gender studies • Author of numerous books and articles • Laura Graham • Specalizes in Brazilian, Venezuelan and Colombian studies(Xavante and Wayuu)
Mama Lola: A Vodou Priestess in Brooklyn • Researched the religion of vodou, and its practice in America and Haiti • The life of one woman: Alourdes (Mama Lola) • Active Listening Participant Observation • Unique relationship with informant • Organization of ethnography
The Afterlife is Where We Come From: The Culture of Infancy in West Africa • Explores the Beng belief that babies have recently returned from wrugbe, the afterlife • Compares infant care in Bengland to America • Historical understanding of Beng’s current situation • Participant Observation, formal and informal interviewing
Performing Dreams: Discourses of Immortality Among the Xavante of Central Brazil • Examines and explains the communicative techniques of the Xavante • History, legends, stories, dreams • 10 years of research • Very little discussion of personal reactions– traditional ethnography
What is Significant about them? • These three ethnographies are all significant in a variety of ways • Understudied topics • Vodou • Beng • Infant culture/children • Specific topics • Religion/Communicative techniques
Comparing Their Methodology • These three ethnographies use similar techniques • Active Listening • Participant Observation • interviews • Different questions; different results • Each used methodological techniques suited to the information they were seeking
How Successful Were They? • Success? • Variation on type of information being sought/informants needed • Brown • Graham • Gottlieb
How Does this Apply to Class? • No two (or three) fieldwork experiences are the same • Different ways of approaching symbolic aspects of culture • Different interpretations • Different presentation • From Grahams traditional “objective” ethnography as compared to Brown’s “subjective” and fictional accounts
Conclusion • These three ethnographies utilized the symbolic approach in a variety of ways • Ultimately each was successful with her research and presentation • Inclusion and understanding of the past’s influence on the present and non-isolated societies
Bibliography • Brown, Karen McCarthy 1991 Mama Lola: A Vodou Priestess in Brooklyn. Berkley and Los Angeles: University of California Press • Clifford, James 1990 Notes on (Field)notes, Fieldnotes: the Makings of Anthropology. Ed. Roger Sanjek. Itthica: Cornell University Press • Ford Foundation, 2007 “Religion and Culture, Meeting the Challenge of Pluralism: Karen McCarthy Brown” [internet], Available from <http://religionandpluralism.org/KarenMcCarthyBrown.htm> [accessed May 1, 2011] • Gottlieb, Alma 2004 The Afterlife is Where We Come From: The Culture of Infancy in West Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press • Graham, Laura R. 1995 Performing Dreams: Discourse of Immortality Among the Xavante of Central Brazil. Austin: University of Texas Press • Larean, Annette, Shultz, Jeffrey, Krieger, Susan. 1996 “Beyond Subjectivity”, Krieger, Susan, Journeys Through Ethnography: Realistic Accounts of Fielwork. Westview Press: Boulder • University of Illlinois, 2011 “Dr. Alma Gottlieb” [internet], Available from <http://www.anthro.illinois.edu/people/ajgottli> [accessed April 28, 2011] • University of Iowa 2007 “Department of Anthropology: Laura R. Graham” [internet]. Available from <http://www.uiowa.edu/~anthro/graham.shtml> [accessed May 1, 2011] • Wolf, Diane L, Ed 1996 FeministDilemmas in Fieldwork. Boulder, Westview Press, Inc.