Media Ethnography in Diasporic Communities
Putut Widjanarko(1*)
(1) Paramadina Graduate School of Communication Universitas Paramadina
(*) Corresponding Author
Abstract
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Abdulrehman, M. S. (2015). Reflections on native ethnography by a nurse researcher. Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 28(2), 152-158.
Abu-Lughod, L. (1988). Fieldwork of a dutiful daughter. In S. Altorki, & C. Fawzi El-Solh, Arab women in the field: Studying your own society (pp. 139-161). Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
Acosta-Alzuru, C. (2005). Home is where my heart is: reflections on doing research in my native country. Popular Communication, 3(3), 181-193.
Aguilar, J. A. (1981). Insider research: An ethnography of a debate. In D. A. Messerschmidt, Anthropologists at home in North America: Methods and issues in the study of one’s own society (pp. 15-26). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Alasuutari, P. (1999). Introduction: Three phases of reception studies. In P. Alasuutari (Ed.), Rethinking the media audience: The new agenda (pp. 1-21). London: Sage.
Allor, M. (1988). Relocating the site of the audience. Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 5, 217-233.
Altorki, S. (1988). At home in the field. In S. Altorki, & C. Fawzi El-Solh, Arab women in the field: Studying your own society (pp. 49-68). Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
Altorki, S., & Fawzi El-Solh, C. (Eds.). (1988a). Arab women in the field: Studying your own society. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
Altorki, S., & Fwazi El-Solh, C. (1988b). Introduction. In S. Altorki, & C. Fawzi El-Solh, Arab women in the field: Studying your own society (pp. 1-23). Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.
Ang, I. (1985). Watching Dallas: Soap opera and melodramatic imagination. London & New York: Metheun.
Ang, I. (1996). Ethnography and radical contextualism in audience studies. In J. Hay, L. Grossberg, E. Wartella (Eds.), The audience and its landscape (pp. 247-264). Boulder: Westview Press.
Appadurai, A. (1988). Putting hierarchy in its place. Cultural Anthropology, 3(1), 36-49.
Appadurai, A. (1996). Modernity at large: Cultural dimension of globalization. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Asad, T. (2002). From the history of colonial anthropology to the anthropology of Western hegemony. In J. Vincent (Ed.), The anthropology of politics: A reader in ethnography, theory, and critique (pp. 133-142). Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers.
Balzer, M. M. (1995). What’s “native” about non-Russian anthropology? In M. M. Balzer (Ed.), Culture incarnates: Native anthropology from Russia (pp. 3-30). Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.
Bhandari, K. B. (2019). Media ethnography: Demands alternative. The Qualitative Report, 24(1), 193-203.
Bird, E. (1992). Travels in nowhere land: Ethnography and the “impossible” audience. Critical Studies in Communication, 9, 250-260.
Bird, E. (2003). The audience in everyday life: Living in a media world. Routledge: New York and London.
Buroway, M. (2000). Introduction: Reaching for the global. In M. Buroway, et al. (Eds.), Global ethnography: Forces, connections, and imaginations in a postmodern world (pp. 1-40). Berkeley: University of California Press.
Clifford, J. (1986). Partial truths. In J. Clifford & G. E. Marcus, (Eds.), Writing culture: The poetics and politics of ethnography (pp. 1-26). Berkeley: University of California Press.
Clifford, J. (1997). Routes: Travel and translation in the late twentieth century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Couldry, N. (2003). Passing ethnographies: Rethinking the sites of agency and reflexivity in a mediated world. In P. M. Murphy and M. M. Kraidy, Global media studies: Ethnographic perspectives (pp. 40-56). New York and London: Routledge.
Denzin, N. K. (1997). Interpretive ethnography: Ethnographic practices for the 21st century. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications.
Diraj, M. (2010). Muslim punks online: A diasporic Pakistani music subculture on the Internet. South Asian Popular Culture, 8(2), 181-194.
Falzon, M. A. (2009). Multi-sited ethnography: Theory, praxis, and locality in contemporary research. In M. A. Falzon (ed). Multi-sited ethnography: Theory, praxis, and locality in contemporary research (pp. 1-23). Surrey, UK & Burlington, USA: Ashgate.
Ferguson, J. (2009). Novelty and method: Reflections on global fieldwork. In M. A. Falzon (ed). Multi-sited ethnography: Theory, praxis, and locality in contemporary research (pp. 195-207). Surrey, UK & Burlington, USA: Ashgate.
Gille, Z., & Riain, S. Ó. (2002). Global ethnography. Annual Review of Sociology, 28, 271-295.
Gilroy, P. (1994). Diaspora. Paragraph, 17(1), 207-212.
Grossberg, L. (1988). Wandering audiences, nomadic critics. Cultural Studies, 2(3), 377-390.
Gupta, A., & Ferguson, J. (1997). Discipline and practice: “The field” as site, method, and location in anthropology. In A. Gupta & J. Ferguson, Anthropological locations: Boundaries and grounds for a field science (pp. 1-46). Berkeley: University of California Press.
Hall, S. (1973). Encoding and decoding in the television discourse. Birmingham: Centre of Cultural Studies, University of Birmingham.
Hannerz, U. (2003). Being there . . . and there . . . and there: Reflections on multi-site ethnography. Ethnography, 4(2), 201-216.
Hannoum, A. (2011). The (re)turn of the native: Ethnography, anthropology, and nativism. In H. Seneviratne (Ed.), The anthropologist and the native: Essays for Gananath Obeyesekere (pp. 423-444). Anthem Press.
Hendry, J. (2003 ). An ethnography in the global arena: Globography perhaps? Global Networks, 3(4), 497-512.
Indiyanto, A. (2012). The politics of belonging: Plundering the local, claiming the global. Humaniora, 24(3), 245-254.
Isaacs, E. (2016). The value of rapid ethnography. In B. Jordan, Advancing ethnography in corporate environments: Challenges and emerging opportunities (pp. 92-107). New York: Routledge.
Jacobs-Huey, L. (2002). The natives are gazing and talking back: Reviewing the problematics of positionality, voice, and accountability among “native” anthropologists. American Anthropologist, 104(3), 791-804.
Jeffrey, B., & Troman, G. (2004). Time for ethnography. British Education Research Journal, 30(4), 535-548.
Junnilainen, L. & Luhtakallio. E. (2015). Media Ethnography. In Mazzoleni (ed.). The International Encyclopaedia of Political Communication. John Wiley & Sons.
Knoblauch, H. (2005). Focused ethnography. Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 6(3). Retrieved from http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/20/43, August 24, 2019.
Koentjaraningrat. (1982). Anthropology in developing countries. In H. Fahim, (Ed.), Indigenous anthropology in non-Western countries: Proceedings of a Burg Wartenstein Symposium (pp. 176-191). Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press.
Kraidy, M. M. (1996). Towards a semiosphere if hybrid identities: A native ethnography of glocalization. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Ohio University, Athens.
Kraidy, M. M., & Murphy, P. D. (2003). Media ethnography: Local, global, or translocal? In P. M. Murphy and M. M. Kraidy, Global media studies: Ethnographic perspectives (pp. 299-307). New York and London: Routledge.
Kuklick, H. (1997). After Ishmael: The fieldwork tradition and its future. In A. Gupta & J. Ferguson, Anthropological locations: Boundaries and grounds for a field science (pp. 47-65). Berkeley: University of California Press.
Kuwayama, T. (2004). Native anthropology: The Japanese challenge to Western academic hegemony. Melbourne: Trans Pacific Press.
Lavie, S., & Swedenburg, T. (1996). Between and among the boundaries of culture: Bridging text and lived experience in the third time space. Cultural Studies, 10(1), 154-179.
Malinowski, B. (1961). Argonauts of the Western Pacific: An account of native enterprise and adventure in the archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc.
Marcus, G. E. (1995). Ethnography in/of the world system: The emergence of multi-sited ethnography. Annual Review of Anthropology, 24, 95-117.
Marcus, G. E. (1998). Ethnography through thick and thin. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Marcus, G. E. (1999). What is at stake—and is not—in the idea and practice of multi-sited ethnography. Canberra Anthropology, 22(2), 6-14.
Marcus, G. E. (2002). Beyond Malinowski and after Writing Culture: On the future of cultural anthropology and the predicament of ethnography. The Australian Journal of Anthropology, 13(2), 191-199.
Marcus, G. E. (2011). Multi-sited ethnography: Five or six things I know about it now. In S. Coleman & P. von Hellerman (eds.), Multi-sited ethnography: Problems and possibilities in the translocation of research methods (pp. 16-32). New York & London: Routledge.
Marcus, G. E., & Fischer, M. M. (1986). Anthropology as cultural critique: An experimental moment in the human sciences. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
McLuhan, M. (1964). Understanding media, the extension of man. New York: Mentor Book.
Messerschmidt, D. A. (Ed.) (1981). Anthropologists at home in North America: Methods and issues in the study of one’s own society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Morley, D. (2000). Home territories: Media, mobility, and identity. London & New York: Routledge.
Murphy, P. (2011). Locating media ethnography. In V. Nightingale, The handbook of media audiences (pp. 380-401). West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons.
Murphy, P. & Kraidy, M. (2003). Towards an ethnographic approach to global media studies. In P. Murphy & M. Kraidy, Global media studies, Ethnographic perspectives. New York: Routledge.
Paterson, C. A. (2017). The ethnography of digital journalism. In B. Franklin & S. Eldredge (eds.) The Routledge Companion to Digital Journalism Studies (pp. 108-116). Routledge: Abingdon, Oxfordshire.
Pink, S. & Morgan, S. (2013). Short-term ethnography: Intense routes to knowing. Symbolic Interaction, 36(3), 351-361.
Radway, J. A. (1984). Reading the romance: Women, patriarchy, and popular culture. The University of North Carolina Press: Chapel Hill.
Radway, J. A. (1988). Reception study: Ethnography and the problems of dispersed audiences and nomadic subjects. Cultural Studies, 2(3), 359-376.
Rits, R.C. (1980). Blitzkrieg ethnography: On the transformation of a method into a movement. Educational Researcher, 9(2), 8-10.
Ryang, S. (2005). Dilemma of a native: On location, authenticity, and reflexivity. The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, 6(2), 143-157.
Setianto, Y. P., (2016). Media use and mediatization of transnational political participation: The case of transnational Indonesians in the United States. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Ohio University, Athens.
Shumow, M. (2010). “A foot in both worlds”: Transnationalism and media use among Venezuelan immigrants in South Florida. International Journal of Communication, 4, 377-397.
Sun, W. & Sinclair, J. (Eds.). (2016). Media and communication in the Chinese diaspora: Rethinking transnationalism. London & New York: Routledge.
Tosoni, S. & Stiernstedt, F. (2016). Media ethnography for busy people. In Kramp, L et al. (eds.). Politics, civil society, and participation: Media and communications in a transforming environment. Bremen.
Võ, L. T. (2000). Performing ethnography in Asian-American communities: Beyond the insider-versus-outsider perspective. In M. F. Manalansan, IV, Cultural compass: Ethnographic exploration of Asian America (pp. 17-37). Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Wardana, A. (2013). “Living in-between”: The multiple integration trajectories of the London Indonesian Muslim immigrants. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Essex.
Weston, K. (1997). The virtual anthropologist. In A. Gupta & J. Ferguson, Anthropological locations: Boundaries and grounds for a field science (pp. 163-184). Berkeley: University of California Press.
Widjanarko, P. (2007). Homeland, identity and media: A study of Indonesian transnational Muslims in New York City. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Ohio University, Athens.
Wolcott, H. W. (1999). Ethnography: A way of seeing. Walnut Creek CA: Altamira Press.
Yosihimura, A. (2015). To believe and not to believe: A native ethnography of Kanashibari in Japan. The Journal of American Folklore, 128(508), 146-148.
Zulfikar, T. (2014). Researching my own backyard: inquiries into an ethnographic study. Ethnography and Education, 9(3), 373-386.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/jh.49389
Article Metrics
Abstract views : 3108 | views : 2734Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c) 2020 Jurnal Humaniora
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.