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<title type="text">Joseph Reagle</title>
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Open Communities, Media, Source, and Standards
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<author>
<name>Joseph Reagle</name>
<uri>http://reagle.org/joseph/blog/method/ethno-v-history</uri>
<email></email>
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<rights>Copyright 2003-2010 Joseph Reagle</rights>
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<updated>2005-10-17T16:15:54Z</updated>
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<title type="html">Ethnography and History</title>
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<id>http://reagle.org/joseph/blog/2005/10/17/ethno-v-history</id>
<updated>2005-10-17T16:15:54Z</updated>
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&lt;p&gt;What is the difference between (sociological) ethnography and history? In
taking a methodological course in each of these disciplines this semester
I&apos;ve been attempting to find an answer to the question; I offer my current,
imperfect, understanding.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Simply, the ethnographer is present to the social phenomenon of interest
whereas the historian has some remove in time and place. Each then has a
different predominant focus on the question of subjectivity. Ethnographers
tend to think about their own position and biases relative to their
environment, and historians are concerned about their relationship to their
sources. However, a reflective practitioner of each method appreciates the
subjectivity of herself and the object of study. Whether it is a discussion
in the present (predominantly ethnography), a recollection of the past (oral
history and ethnography), or records of the past (predominantly history),
each is shaped by the social environs.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Another possible difference is that while history is often content with
the particular, sociology reaches for a transcendent theory. This is not to
say sociology has no concern with &quot;thick description,&quot; nor that history has
no thesis -- it is an argument about humans in time -- but that their primary
aspiration and style differ. Whereas sociological theory creates, or is the
result of, a distance by the researcher, time often does the same for the
historian permitting a triangulation (of many sources) whereas thte
ethnographer often looks for contemporary comparison. (Comparison with the
past is often called the &quot;ethnographic revisit.&quot;)&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;In addition, one might then ask how journalism and anthropology fit into
this mix!&lt;/p&gt;
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