They Lie, We Lie

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A01=Peter Metcalf
Author_Peter Metcalf
Baram River
Berawan studies
Category=JBCC
Category=JBS
Category=JHM
Category=JHMC
Catholic Mission School
Colonial Administration
cultural critique
Death Songs
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Ethnic Group Names
ethnographic fieldwork
existential dilemmas in ethnography
Indonesian Borneo
informant relationships
Interior Borneo
Lace Makers
Large Family
Long House
Longhouse
Longhouse Communities
Longhouse People
Meratus Dayaks
Mwinilunga District
Napoleon III
National Security Education Program
Orang Ulu
Played Back
postcolonial anthropology
qualitative research methods
Rhodes Livingstone Institute
Ritual Consensus
Timber Boom
Upriver People
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415262590
  • Weight: 470g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Oct 2001
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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They Lie, We Lie is an attempt by an experienced fieldworker to engage recent critiques in ethnography, that is the writing of culture, made both from within anthropology and from such disciplines as cultural studies and post-colonial theory. This is necessary because there has been a polarization within anthropology between those who react dismissively to what Marshall Sahlins calls 'afterology' and those who find the critiques so crippling as to make it hard to get on with anthropology at all. Metcalf bridges this divide by analyzing the contradictions of fieldwork in connection with a particular 'informant', a formidable old lady who tried for twenty years to control what he would and would not learn. At each stage, the author draws out the general implications of his predicament by making comparisions to the most famous of all fieldwork relationships, that between Victor Turner and Muchona.
The result is an account that is accessible to those unfamiliar with the current critiques of ethnography, and helpful to those who are only too familiar to them. His discussion shows, not how to evade the critiques, but how in fact anthropologists have coped with the existential dilemmas of fieldwork.

Peter Metcalf has conducted research in Borneo for over two decades. He is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Virginia, USA.

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