ABSTRACT
This collection of essays emerged out of intense conversations on multi-sited ethnography, prompted by a workshop held at the University of Sussex that brought together researchers from different institutional backgrounds and affiliations in Europe, the United States and Africa – including George Marcus himself, the person most associated with the term and the method. These researchers were brought together not only to discuss the shifting meaning of the concept in anthropology, but also to see how it has influenced actual research projects that have spanned the world. The volume that has resulted is not meant to be read as a program but as an extended provocation, an argument that multi-sitedness can be good not only to think, but also to act, both with and through. Arguably, this creation of a dynamic, shifting perspective is not so different from anthropology itself – a discipline dependent on the cultivation of aesthetic, embodied and intellectual sensibilities in relation to the world at large.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |54 pages
Spatialities of the Field
part |6 pages
Part A Introduction
part |54 pages
Challenging Conventions?
part |3 pages
Part B Introduction
chapter |15 pages
‘What Do You Call the Heathen These Days?'
part |67 pages
Multiple Pathways and the Price of Liberation
part |3 pages
Part C Introduction