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Klappentext Qualitative research, especially ethnography, has seen a paradigm shift since 1968. This so-called 'Third Moment' was concerned with the critical issue of the textual representation of ethnographic work. There was a call for a turn towards texts that mirrored the messiness of social life, that were faithful to the many voices of social worlds, in which the artfulness of ethnographic writing was manifest and in which the ethnographer was visibly present in the text. Representing Ethnography brings together into one set all the important material on this 'rhetorical turn' in qualitative research. Many of the critiques of the rhetorical turn are particularly hard to obtain and have never been gathered together in an accessible way. Volume I focuses on the contexts and controversies of this type of discourse. Volume II covers the reading of qualitative research in a range of disciplines, such as sociology, anthropology and history, and gives classic examples of the ways in which text can be read. Volume III examines the rhetorical turn in terms of analysis and voice. Volume IV showcases how ethnographic realities are represented to give readers a good coverage of all the possibilities. Zusammenfassung Representing Ethnography brings together all the important material on this 'rhetorical turn' in qualitative research, including critiques which are particularly hard to obtain and have never been gathered together in an accessible way. Inhaltsverzeichnis Volume 1: Contexts and Controversies Introduction - 1. Paul Atkinson and Sara Delamont Functionalists write too - 2. Boon, J. A. Stories and Sociology - 3. Davis, F. Looking both ways - 4. Herzfeld, M. Styles of reporting qualitative field research - 5. Lofland, J. Slide show: Evans-Pritchard¿s African Transparencies - 6. Geertz, C. The emergence of Self-consciousness in Ethnography - 7. Nash, D. and Wintrob, R. On the writing of ethnography - 8. Crapanzano, V. The literary rhetoric of science: comedy and pathos in drinking driver research - 9. Gusfield, J. The analogical tradition and the emergence of dialogical Anthropology - 10. Tedlock, D. What written knowledge does - 11. Bazerman, C. Dialectical Irony - 12. Brown, R.H. On ethnographic Surrealism - 13. Clifford, J. Writing ethnography - 14. Atkinson, P.A. On ethnographic authority - 15. Clifford, C. J. Putting facts together - 16. Law, J. and Williams, R.J. From rapport to under erasure - 17. Marcus, G.E. The Rhetoric of ethnographic holism - 18. Thornton, R.J. Ethnography without tears - 19. Roth, P.A. Rhetoric and the authority of ethnography - 20. Sangren, P.S. The Postmodern turn in anthropology - 21. F.E. Mascia-Lees et al Make me reflexive - but not yet: strategies for managing essential reflexivity in ethnographic discourse - 22. Watson, G. Volume 2: Reading Qualitative Research The rhetoric of economics - 23. McCloskey, D. Textual Persuasion - 24. Yearley, S. Irony: a methodological theory - 25. Anderson, D.C. and Sharrock, W.W. Confronting ethnography¿s crisis of representation - 26. Denzin, N.K. Four ways to improve the craft of fieldwork - 27. Emerson, R.M. Ethnographies as texts - 28. Marcus, G.E. and Gushman, D. The ¿crisis¿ in representation - 29. Flaherty, M. Beyond Malinowski and after Writing Culture - 30. Marcus, G.E. The crisis in representation: a brief history - 31. Flaherty, M.G. The sky is not falling - 32. Manning, P.K. Anthropology as a kind of writing - 33. Spencer, J. On ethnographic self-fashioning: Conrad and Malinowski - 34. Clifford, J. Goffman¿s poetics - 35. Atkinson, P.A. Sarcasm, satire and irony as voices in Goffman¿s Asylums - 36. Fine, G.A. and Martini, D.D. Out of context - 37. Strathern, M. et al. Volume 3: Analysis an...