Thursday, November 6, 2008

Ethnopoems


If you know what an Ethnopoem is, then you must have been in class today. YAY! If not, then read all about it in Fieldworking.

Please post your ethnopoem (from your transcript or fieldnotes, please indicate which data source it's from) to the class blog by Saturday morning. (Just click on the "comment" button at the bottom of this post and copy & paste your poem into the dialogue box). 

If you don't know what I'm referring to, please email me so we can figure out how you might fill in the gaps. (Motivational boost: There are only 5 more weeks in the semester.)


Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Emergent Themes and Dichotomies

As we head into the home stretch of our fieldworking projects, it is going to become paramount that you begin to analyze your data (fieldnotes, interviews, secondary sources) for themes. A theme in research is just like a theme in a book or a poem in English class--it is a broadly defined issue or dichotomy that reflects some complexity of "the human condition." 

When we were in the library last Monday, Mark, the reference librarian, was telling us about his fieldwork with farmers in the Azores (in Portugal). He said that after living there for a few months, he began to witness a theme he had read a lot about in the research on farmers in the Azores: honor versus shame. This is a cultural theme: honor vs. shame. The farmers' code of conduct was rooted in their honor, in behaving honorably and in sharing their bounty with their neighbors. But, when a fellow farmer would break "the code," he would be shamed by the community. Indeed, there was a true "honor code" that exists there, that keeps the culture "in check" so to speak.

This is where you want to be going--looking for a similar theme or thread that can represent a "code" of your subculture. It might help, too, to represent your theme as a dichotomy (as opposites, two sides of a coin). For example, Kevin might be noticing that, within his subculture, there is a direct relationship between worship and community--peoples' faith in the Dominican-American subculture is directly linked to their connection with their immigrant community here in Providence. They are "displaced people" and find solace, comfort, and community in worshipping God together. 

Or, for another example, Xenia might be noticing that, within her subculture, mothers of children with cancer have to be so strong and so stolid and so sturdy that their involvement with a support network of other mothers works to help build themselves back up, to "refill" their energy for the week,  their self-esteem,  their store of hope. And, there is a long history of women coming together in such support networks to help each other cope and get through. Very cool. 

One more example is in Rachael's subculture, where she might be noticing that it's difficult to tell whether "underground artists" choose to be "underground" or if society pushes them underground because they are so far outside the mainstream. Is an "underground artist" something I can grow up to be someday or is it because of my political, edgy art that I will someday be forced, by others,  into this "underground" category of artists? 

I urge you--implore you--this week to post an idea or two here to SHOW ME that the wheels are turning, that you are thinking and moving forward in your thinking about this project. It's time for the rubber to hit the road here--it is most important that you do not lose energy or momentum now! Keep going!

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Post Your Breakthroughs Here!


After hearing from some of you today that you'd like to be able to post your "Ah-ha!" moments or other fieldworking discoveries here on the blog, I'm writing this new post in the hope that you will "comment" by sharing with us exciting news from your fieldsite or your interview experiences. YAY! Here's to some lightbulbs going off this weekend (in good way, as in, "I have an idea!"). 

And if you're stumped for what to wear to that crazy Halloween party, I know: go as a fieldworker. 

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Cross Pollination

Hello Fieldworkers!

Thanks to most of you for posting your Verbal Snapshot to our class blog. YAY! The first foray into our virtual fieldworking gallery worked! I made an executive decision to move Stacy and Rachael's pieces into the vessel with everyone else's, so as not to "feature" some and not others (this is the power of the teacher, people). 

I urge you to scroll through your classmates' writing and to read it carefully, looking for things you like and ways you might revise or hone your own descriptive writing. 

I'd also like you to read my comments--about specificity in word choice, casual (colloquial) vs. serious language, and about capturing the tone of your fieldsite. Reading each others' fieldwriting is an important lens through which we can consider our own writing.

And, remember, this is academic writing. This is research writing. This is writing that needs to be reminiscent of Jennifer Toth and rhetorical forms (ethos, pathos, logos). Push yourselves to live up to that high standard!

I also urge you to take the poll I created (look to the right). Happy reading, and see you in the Library tomorrow at noon.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Coming Soon...

Once you have gathered enough data from your fieldsites, I will ask you to post pieces of your fieldworking  projects as well as questions to pose to the other Honors Program fieldworkers. This is also a site to facilitate cross-pollination in your research process; that is, another student may know a contact or have access to an event in your subculture. It would be great to share this kind of "cultural capital" with one another. 

The news from my section is that everyone has chosen a subculture to study and has taken their first set of fieldnotes. Research proposals are finished, and we are on to more fieldnotes and analysis and are beginning to talk about interviews. 

The subcultures that my students have selected for their fieldstudies are:
  • Dominican Catholics 
  • White Noise Records in Providence
  • Tattoo Parlor in North Kingstown
  • Girl Scouts of Westerly
  • Independently-Owned Bakery: Seven Stars
  • "Tomorrow's Fund" at Hasbro: Mothers of Kids with Cancer
  • Shryne: Life of a Local Rock Band
  • R. I. National Guard Band
  • Professional Poker Players
  • Underground Artists in Providence
  • Theater Actors in Providence


Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Collaboration is Part of the Process

This is the space where our students can come together to talk about their projects, to pose questions to each other, to celebrate small victories ("I did an interview today!"), and to work out their analysis of data. It's a virtual classroom-away-from-the-classroom for both of our sections. YAY!