Field Stories asks anthropologists to consider what moments linger in their minds from fieldwork, what people and events appear unconnected to research topics but nonetheless generate insights, and what stories they tell their students. Essentially, what value do stories have in anthropology? This slender volume comprises seven essays focused on field-based accounts, bookended by an introduction and conclusion. Editors Leggett and Leggett encourage anthropologists to write about "real stories," to relate these to students as well as audiences beyond the classroom, and to take up non-traditional subjects, including ones dealing with personal experiences often excluded from published ethnographies. The chapters draw on events that occurred in Thailand, Croatia, Brazil, Greece, Ethiopia, Kenya, and the US, in stories that provide insight on entry into the field, intimate conversations, friendships and research, identity issues, serendipitous occurrences, mobility and place, and violence. Authors also discuss—and share—writing beyond what is expected: e.g., keeping "other notebooks," writing poetry or a novel, recounting awkward or painful incidents, and publishing anthropologically informed articles that are accessible to a broader public. This book offers encouragement and examples for an academic readership. Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
These contributors have set down in writing those stories from fieldwork that usually remain the stuff of cocktail parties, conversations among friends, and classroom provocations. In doing so, they have reaffirmed the power of ethnography and of storytelling for conveying anthropological (and human) truths. These stories will make your heart race, make you weep, and make you think. Accompanying the vignettes, poems, and notes from field journals are philosophical reflections and ruminations on the construction of ethnographic knowledge, the process of authorship, sticky fieldwork ethics, and the anthropologist over time. For all those who have done ethnographic fieldwork or who teach anthropology, this collection will inspire you to further reflect on your own field stories and their power to illuminate the most vital lessons of our discipline.
— Gina Louise Hunter, Illinois State University
Field Stories, edited by William Leggett and Ida Fadzillah Leggett, is a trenchant collection that focuses on the powerful force of the ethnographic field narrative. Anthropologists are avid story-tellers, word-weavers, emotion-conjurers and co-world-makers. Ethnographic fieldwork is not about ‘observing’ life from afar, but is a series of engaged encounters, desires, attachments, and bonds. It is not a cold-hearted data retrieval method. The field story is not just an incident, an insignificant turn of event, or a mundane conversation. A field story is not just ‘background’ material in hastily written fieldnotes in computer files or hidden dusty notebooks about trivial specks of social situations. A field story spins experiences about long term field engagement with peoples and places that lead to feelings of ‘being there’ and ‘being with’ those bodies, sites, sounds, tempos, and atmospheres. The editors bring together various anthropologists’ elegant voices to showcase the evocative and provocative dimensions of field stories and offer them as pivots for learning moments and vital enlightenments.
— Martin F. Manalansan IV, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Anthropologists engage in three major kinds of encounters: with people in their fields, with colleagues, and with students (and beyond these, members of a wider public). With colleagues and with students, they talk about their fields, but in different ways. In this book, they talk to colleagues about how to talk to students about concrete field experiences—meeting with Nigerian rappers in a Brazilian favela, becoming a victim of violence in Kenya, a long train ride through the American West... This is a very important step toward the creation of a real public anthropology!
— Ulf Hannerz, Stockholm University; author of World Watching
Field Stories brings readers into hidden corners of intimate experiences too often absent from scholarly writings. In a series of deeply personal, often fraught, and always human stories, contributors to this captivating volume revisit old fieldnotes to create original narratives, enriching our understanding of people, places, culture, and history.
— Alisse Waterston, John Jay College of Criminal Justice; author of Light in Dark Times: The Human Search for Meaning
Field Stories are important stories to tell… and for many different reasons. Leggett and Fadzillah Leggett have brought together the kind of rich and compelling tales that, rarely find their way into the academic work of ethnographers. Trauma and violence as topics run throughout many of the stories collected in this volume but so too does the topic of friendship. The remembrances from the field recounted here demonstrate that ethnographers would do well to find ways to share such stories more often and more broadly.
— W. Warner Wood, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; author of Made in Mexico: Zapotec Weavers and the Global Ethnic Art Market
The humble act of telling stories is the regenerative seed and solar dynamo that gives energy and substance to anthropology. The essays here offer rich stories and pay careful attention to the places where we share our stories—in the classroom, in the field, and alongside other ethnographers as we learn and practice our craft. This book re-centers storytelling as a crucial resource for anthropological endeavors, and should be useful for teaching and for thinking about how we tell our tales from the field.
— David Syring, University of Minnesota Duluth
Anthropologists tell stories. Often, the best are those we tell our students in our classes. The authors, here, bring their emotionally charged stories out of the classroom and into this accessible, readable, and impactful collection. All seasoned ethnographers, they tell of vivid and poignant experience, experimenting with writing while reflecting on the meanings of their tales from the field.
— Walter E. Little, University at Albany