ABSTRACT

The advent of social media offers anthropologists exciting opportunities to extend their research to communities in fresh ways. At the same time, these technological developments open up anthropological fieldwork to different hazards. Networked Anthropology explores the increasing appropriation of diverse media platforms and social media into anthropological research and teaching. The chapters consider the possibilities and challenges of multimedia, how network ecologies work, the ethical dilemmas involved, and how to use multimedia methodologies. The book combines theoretical insights with case studies, methodological sketches and pedagogical notes. Drawing on recent ethnographic work, the authors provide practical guidance in creative ways of doing networked anthropology. They point to the future of ethnography, both inside and outside the classroom, and consider ways in which networked anthropology might develop.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

What is networked anthropology?
BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington

chapter 1|15 pages

Anthropology confronts a networked world

BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington

chapter 2|31 pages

Networked ecologies

BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington

chapter 3|15 pages

Towards a networked ethics

BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington

chapter 4|13 pages

Moving from visual anthropology to networked anthropology

BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington

chapter 5|15 pages

Case Study 1

chapter 6|10 pages

Case Study 2

Jacques
BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion

Tomorrow's networks
BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington

part 1|41 pages

Activities

chapter |13 pages

Pre-field

BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington

chapter |22 pages

The networked field

BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington

chapter |4 pages

Recursive analysis

BySamuel Gerald Collins, Matthew Slover Durington