Non-representational ethnography: new ways of animating lifeworlds
Author(s) -
Phillip Vannini
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
cultural geographies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.564
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1477-0881
pISSN - 1474-4740
DOI - 10.1177/1474474014555657
Subject(s) - ethnography , sociology , embodied cognition , aesthetics , representation (politics) , field (mathematics) , epistemology , performativity , everyday life , politics , performative utterance , feeling , anthropology , gender studies , art , philosophy , mathematics , political science , pure mathematics , law
Over the last decade and a half, socio-cultural geographies have witnessed a genuine explosion of interest in the ethnographic tradition. Such interest is due in part to the increasing acceptance of non-representational ideas across the field and the way these ideas have constructively informed the long-standing debate on the analytics, esthetics, and politics of ethnographic representation. Non-representational theoretical ideas have influenced the way ethnographers tackle important methodological and conceptual undercurrents in their work, such as vitality, performativity, corporeality, sensuality, and mobility. This article aims to capture a few of the characteristics of this constantly evolving non-representational ethnographic style. Non-representational ethnography seeks to cultivate an affinity for the analysis of events, practices, assemblages, structures of feeling, and the backgrounds of everyday life against which relations unfold in their myriad potentials. Non-representational ethnography emphasizes the fleeting, viscous, lively, embodied, material, more-than-human, precognitive, non-discursive dimensions of spatially and temporally complex lifeworlds.
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