03
MAI
MAI
Doing Fieldwork in Socialist Eastern Europe: Methodology, Ethics and Engagement (DAY 1)
Colloque / Congrès / Forum
Ouvert au grand public
03.05.2022 08:30 - 19:00
+ Mixte
Anthropological research on the socialist countries of Central and Eastern Europe is often paired with material and memorial culture, property regimes, changing gender roles, ethnicity, or labor models. The immersion of the fieldworker in the realities of socialism remains widely overlooked in the examinations of deep legal, economic, social, and macro-institutional transformations that shaped the respective societies. Therefore, this workshop aims to explore reflections on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Slovakia, and Georgia from the 1970s onwards, together with a comparative study about Bolivia. What methodological and ethical challenges did the ethnographers encounter in their fieldwork relationships? How did the institutional setting impact their fieldwork? How did the anthropologist engage with the needs and desires of the studied subjects? How does ethnography play out in other socialist and post-socialist field settings and what can we learn from this comparison? And last, but not least: has methodology changed? How did the anthropologists adapt their methodologies from the 1990s onwards?
By looking at socialism as a resource for recent anthropological debates, the papers will highlight new associations between nation and identity, global and local, history and memory. Thirty years after the collapse of state socialism in Central and Eastern Europe, approaching fieldwork challenges and strategies from an enriching comparative perspective will offer fruitful scholarship prospects.
By looking at socialism as a resource for recent anthropological debates, the papers will highlight new associations between nation and identity, global and local, history and memory. Thirty years after the collapse of state socialism in Central and Eastern Europe, approaching fieldwork challenges and strategies from an enriching comparative perspective will offer fruitful scholarship prospects.
Quand?
03.05.2022 08:30 - 19:00
En ligne
MS Teams
Où?
Organisation
Intervenants
Program - Tuesday, May 3rd, 2022 (see attached annex)
- 8:30-9:00 Arrival and coffee
- 9:00-9:30 Opening remarks
Raluca Mateoc, University of Fribourg
Ansgar Jödicke, University of Fribourg
François Rüegg, University of Fribourg
- 9:30-10:30 Keynote Lecture
Chris Hann, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle / Saale
How Far Is Tázlár From Budapest?
- 10:30-10:45 Coffee break
- 10:45-12:00 The methodological color of Eastern European fieldwork
Carol Silverman, University of Oregon - Ethnographic Research about/with Roma during/after
Socialism: Methodological and Ethical Strategies
Raluca Mateoc, University of Fribourg – Revisiting Romanian rural socialism via three memory frames
- 12:00 -13:00 Standing lunch
- 13:00-14:15 Entangled socialism and nation-state boundedness: a comparative perspective
Takahiro Miyachi, University of Tokyo - Political anthropology and entangled socialism in the 21st
century Bolivia (on Teams)
François Rüegg, University of Fribourg - Bounded by the Nation state
- 14:15-14:30 Coffee break
- 14:30-15:45 Ethnography and social relations in Eastern Europe
Steven Sampson, Lund University - Fii attent (Watch out!). Surveillance and Intimacy in Ethnographic
Research
Gerald Creed, City University of New York - The Traffic in Social(ist) Relations
- 15:45-16:00 Coffee break
- 16:00-16:30 Closing remarks day 1 and general discussion
- 19:00 Dinner, Café du Midi
- 8:30-9:00 Arrival and coffee
- 9:00-9:30 Opening remarks
Raluca Mateoc, University of Fribourg
Ansgar Jödicke, University of Fribourg
François Rüegg, University of Fribourg
- 9:30-10:30 Keynote Lecture
Chris Hann, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle / Saale
How Far Is Tázlár From Budapest?
- 10:30-10:45 Coffee break
- 10:45-12:00 The methodological color of Eastern European fieldwork
Carol Silverman, University of Oregon - Ethnographic Research about/with Roma during/after
Socialism: Methodological and Ethical Strategies
Raluca Mateoc, University of Fribourg – Revisiting Romanian rural socialism via three memory frames
- 12:00 -13:00 Standing lunch
- 13:00-14:15 Entangled socialism and nation-state boundedness: a comparative perspective
Takahiro Miyachi, University of Tokyo - Political anthropology and entangled socialism in the 21st
century Bolivia (on Teams)
François Rüegg, University of Fribourg - Bounded by the Nation state
- 14:15-14:30 Coffee break
- 14:30-15:45 Ethnography and social relations in Eastern Europe
Steven Sampson, Lund University - Fii attent (Watch out!). Surveillance and Intimacy in Ethnographic
Research
Gerald Creed, City University of New York - The Traffic in Social(ist) Relations
- 15:45-16:00 Coffee break
- 16:00-16:30 Closing remarks day 1 and general discussion
- 19:00 Dinner, Café du Midi
Pièces jointes
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