Systematic Fieldwork: Foundations of Ethnography and Interviewing - Hardcover

Werner, Oswald; Schoepfle, G. Mark

 
9780803925595: Systematic Fieldwork: Foundations of Ethnography and Interviewing

Inhaltsangabe

Systematic Fieldwork is the culmination of decades of work by Werner, Schoepfle and their associates on developing a systematic method of doing ethnographic work. In the first volume the authors explain the theoretical basis to their model of fieldwork, `ethnoscience' ethnography. They then show how to design and conduct systematic fieldwork using ethnoscience observation and interview techniques.

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Über die Autorinnen und Autoren

Oswald J. Werner has been Professor and Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and Linguistics at Northwestern University, where he researched the Navajo language and culture.

He received his Bachelors in Applied Physics from the Technische Hochschule in Stuttgart, Germany in 1950.  He received his Master’s in Anthropology from Syracuse University and his Doctorate in Anthropology at the University of Indiana in Bloomington, in 1963 under the anthropological linguist, C. F. Voegelin

During his professorship at Northwestern University (1965-1998) Werner helped implement a program in Anthropology and Public policy within the Department; undertook applied multi-year research programs in Navajo medicine and education with the Navajo Tribe, and Northwestern University Summer Field School in Applied Cultural and Linguistic Anthropology.

Werner has been active in his profession and served on committees of the National Institute of Mental Health, the American Anthropological Association, the Linguistic Society of America, and the Central States Anthropological Society.  He also served with Cultural Anthropology Methods (renamed Field Methods) in 1989, and writes a regular column for the Journal. 




G. Mark Schoepfle has devoted his entire career to applied anthropology in federal and tribal government, with an adjunct status in various academic institutions that have often helped support this research.

He received a bachelor’s degree in anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1968.  Following his military service, he received his Master’s in 1972 and Doctorate in social anthropology 1977 from Northwestern University, under the anthropological linguist Oswald Werner, his dissertation chair. 

His employment in anthropology began with the Navajo Tribal Division of Education.  Here, under the supervision of Oswald Werner, he helped train and supervise Navajo researchers, and compile ethnographic reports of the Navajo Nation’s different school systems.  What began originally as involvement with a one-year training and research project evolved into a 14-year research and teaching career on the Navajo Nation.  It involved both research and training Navajos as active research participants and analysts, co-publishers, and findings presenters.  Beginning in 1974, he was involved with Oswald Werner in developing a researcher’s training manual that finally became the two-volume Systematic Fieldwork published in 1987.  From 1980 to 1984 he also served as Deputy Director of the Northwestern University Summer Field School in Ethnography.

In 1988 he shifted his career interests to auditing and evaluation at the Government Accountability Office, and later the Department of the Interior in Washington, DC.  At the Department of the Interior, he has served as cultural anthropologist for the National Park Service’s program in applied ethnography, and at what is now the Office of Federal Acknowledgment.


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