What makes something ethnographic?
George Marcus and Dick Cushman’s piece “Ethnographies as Texts” from the 1982 Annual Review of Anthropology identifies nine characteristics of ethnographic realist writing:
1. A narrative structure organized by topic, chronology, or a problem;
2. The unintrusive presence of the ethnographer in the text;
3. Common denominator people, not as characters but just “the people;”
4. Based on ethnographic data produced through fieldwork;
5. A focus on everyday life situations, what they see as a case study merger of interpretive and realist goals;
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6. An emphasis on the native point of view;
7. Establishing specificity and sufficient context for any generalizations made;
8. The use of disciplinary jargon to signal anthropological scholarship; and,
9. Contextual exegesis of native concepts and discourses.
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Read more about ethnography:
What Makes Something Ethnographic by Carole McGranahan
--from Savage Minds: Notes and Queries in Anthropology