Forum: Critical ethnography
Johais, Eva; Leser, Julia; Kusic, Katarina; Eggeling, Kristin Anabel; Weißenfels, André; Streinzer, Andreas; Davey, Ryan; Kocks, Johanna; Anderl, Felix; Merkle, Lena; Leander, Anna
Original version
in Public Anthropologist vol. 6 no. 1 pp. 125-199 10.1163/25891715-0601000310.1163/25891715-06010003
Abstract
Ethnography is a political practice with an ambivalent relationship to power. On the one hand, it has benefitted from, legitimized and stabilized hegemonic power relations. On the other hand, it can challenge the self-evidence of the status quo, give room for multiple experiences and worldviews, and place itself in the service of emancipation and social transformation. The forum does not define what critical ethnography is but brings together a range of theoretical perspectives and modalities by which ethnography unfolds critical potential.