What's the difference between ethnographer and ethnography?

Ethnographer


Definition:

  • (n.) One who investigates ethnography.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) RPG was prepared as mothers do it in a rural area, according to previous ethnographic work.
  • (2) Student diaries and ethnographic data were used to explore how students manage the transition and to document their coping strategies.
  • (3) Interviews with a small group of nurses working in a primary nursing ward were content analysed using the Ethnograph computer program.
  • (4) Ethnographic interviews with 23 first-year students at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf at Rochester Institute of Technology (NTID at RIT) were used to gather information about communication.
  • (5) Goffman, Salisbury and Henry), and the importance of ethnographic study in social psychiatry is highlighted.
  • (6) An innovative methodological approach to narrative analysis is employed which combines ethnographic and epidemiologic techniques.
  • (7) Data were gathered with ethnographic interviews of 109 subjects as well as by participant observation in each setting.
  • (8) Doença de criança is described based on ethnographic interviews with 50 traditional healers and 50 bereaved mothers whose children have died from the condition.
  • (9) As part of a higher degree on research methods, exploratory work was undertaken concerning educational philosophy and educational practice using an ethnographic approach.
  • (10) This paper is based on an ethnographic study examining how families caring for a chronically ill child in the home construct their experiences of illness.
  • (11) Analysis of qualitative, ethnographically based interviews with 31 women indicated that the key relationships they describe fall into three classes: ties through blood, friendships, and those we label "constructed" ties (kin-like nonkin relations).
  • (12) By recourse to the North American ethnographic material in particular (which once was the source of this confusion) the author reaches the conclusion that the only way of separating the terms from each other is to approach the whole problem structurally as a two-levelled issue.
  • (13) Patients (n = 10), in 30 ethnographical interviews conducted in Spanish by a culturally sensitive interviewer identified characteristics, needs, and sources of comfort.
  • (14) The techniques used were ethnographic, non-directive interview techniques and naturalistic observation.
  • (15) A shift away from a theory-driven 'applied ethics' to a more situational, contextual approach to medical ethics opens the way for ethnographic studies of moral problems in health care as well as a conception of moral theory that is more responsive to the empirical dimensions of those problems.
  • (16) The cultural performance of sickness is seen in a framework of power, space, and time, and comparisons drawn between preindustrial and industrial patterns of healing (including Hahn's detailed ethnographic account of the practice of an internist in the United States).
  • (17) These data are discussed in light of ethnographic documentation as a means by which the archaeological record is linked with associated behavior of the representative populations.
  • (18) These matters concern the epistemological basis of ethnography, and the reliability of ethnographic research methods.
  • (19) The study design was based on ethnographic methods and data were collected by diary keeping and semi-structured interviews.
  • (20) The first study is an ethnographic qualitative one (n = 85 households, 525 individuals); the second one is more quantitative-epidemiologic (n = 112 households, 563 individuals).

Ethnography


Definition:

  • (n.) That branch of knowledge which has for its subject the characteristics of the human family, developing the details with which ethnology as a comparative science deals; descriptive ethnology. See Ethnology.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Making use of ethnography provides family physicians with a greater array of research methods compatible with clinical practice.
  • (2) The source and nature of the ethnography of the important eighteenth century thinker Johann Gottfried Herder can in large part be understood through his relationship to his own society and especially through his part in the German cultural nationalist movement of the day.
  • (3) They also present some of the major conceptual foundations of cultural psychiatry, which include ethnography, emic and etic approaches, the cross-cultural approach, and the study of subjective culture.
  • (4) This study is an ethnography of the ethics of one pediatric bone marrow transplant team.
  • (5) It outlines the advantages and limitations of such data sources as surveys, indicators, and ethnography, and briefly explores the work and utility of local, national, and international drug surveillance networks.
  • (6) Building on this theoretical background, an approach to ethnography is illustrated through an analysis of suffering in Chinese society.
  • (7) The findings of this analysis lead the author to argue, in contrast with recent ethnographies which treat discourses on emotions as rhetorical strategies rather than as reflections of personal or communal experience, that we need an integrative approach which focuses on the relationship between language and experience, politics and felt emotion.
  • (8) A longitudinal, clinical ethnography formed the basis of this study.
  • (9) This paper contrasts ethnography with a randomized clinical trial design addressing the same question.
  • (10) An overview of the purpose, methodology, strengths, and limitations of ethnography is presented.
  • (11) These matters concern the epistemological basis of ethnography, and the reliability of ethnographic research methods.
  • (12) A longitudinal, descriptive ethnography formed the basis of the study described in this article, in which 120 interviews were conducted over a period of 6 months with 13 individuals who had experienced lacunar infarcts of the internal capsule of the brain.
  • (13) In response to this concern, this study presents a framework of analysis based on ethnography as narrative of the old and the new.
  • (14) This research uses ethnography and grounded-theory methods to develop a model of recovering alcoholics' goal progression.
  • (15) Issues in family medicine such as patient compliance, doctor-patient relationships, and patients' subjective experience of illness may be optimally studied with ethnography.
  • (16) Ethnography is a qualitative research design that has relevance for clinical research in occupational therapy.
  • (17) Clinical ethnography as an alternative method of studying stroke recovery is described.
  • (18) Ethnography presents the researcher with a methodology for studying meaning carefully; a process for going beyond what is seen or heard to infer what people know by careful listening and observation of behavior, environment, and context.
  • (19) Qualitative research methods dominate in the humanities (history, literature), theology, law and some social sciences (ethnography).
  • (20) Medical anthropologist Daisy Deomampo, who has written an ethnography of surrogate mothers in Mumbai, argues that this image of the “deceitful surrogate” has helped doctors and parents conceal the power imbalance that made foreign surrogacy possible.

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