Estrid Sørensen, Robert Schmidt, III, Henriette Langstrup, Brit Ross Winthereik, Amade A. M'charek, Katrin Amelang, Stef
We have come a long way from Evans-Pritchard's famous dictum that "there is only one method in social anthropology, the comparative method - and that is impossible." Yet a good 40 years later, qualitative social inquiry still has an uneasy relationship with comparison. This volume sets out "thick comparison" as a means to revive "comparing" as a productive process in ethnographic work: a process that helps to revitalise the articulation work inherent in analytical ethnographies; to vary observer perspectives and point towards "blind spots;" to name and create "new things" and modes of...
We have come a long way from Evans-Pritchard's famous dictum that "there is only one method in social anthropology, the comparative method - and that ...