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Clifford Geertz,

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Title: Clifford Geertz,


1
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • The Point of View of the Researcher
  • The Position of the Researcher
  • 1. Bronislaw Malinowskis A Diary in the Strict
    Sense of the Term showed Malinowski as
    sometimes dissatisfied with, and unsympathetic
    to, the natives he studied.
  • Geertzs question if it is nota capacity to
    think, feel, and perceive like a native, how is
    anthropological knowledge of the way natives
    think, feel, and perceive possible? When we can
    no longer claim a sort of transcultural
    identification with our subjects?

2
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • The Point of View of the Researcher
  • The Position of the Researcher
  • 2. Experience-near concepts
  • how an informant might describe his/her own
    feelings and thoughts, and the feelings and
    thoughts of close friends or neighbours

3
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • The Point of View of the Researcher
  • The Position of the Researcher
  • 3. Experience-distant concepts
  • how a specialist might describe such thoughts
    and feelings, in order to prove their scientific
    or conceptual hypotheses.
  • Experience-near and Experience-distant are
    not qualitatively different nor is one
    preferable to the other.

4
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • The Point of View of the Researcher
  • The Position of the Researcher
  • 4. The trick is not to get yourself into some
    inner correspondence of spirit with your
    informants.
  • The trick is to figure out what they think they
    are up to p. 58 top
  • What the ethnographer perceives is what they
    perceive by means of p. 58 mid

5
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • Investigating social organizations
  • through the concept of person
  • 1. The Western conception of the person as a
    bounded, unique, more or less integrated
    motivational and cognitive universe, a dynamic
    center of awareness, emotion, judgment, and
    action organized into a distinctive whole
  • is a rather peculiar idea within the
    context of the worlds cultures. (p. 59 middle)
  • First, the researcher must ignore this idea, and
    apply ? the framework of the informants idea of
    self-hood to the informants ? experiences

6
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • Investigating social organizations
  • through the concept of person
  • 2. Personal and societal conceptions of
  • inside / outside, and their proper
  • ordering or hierarchy within that society

7
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • III. The internal point of view Frameworks by
    which people designate and interact with each
    other within the organization
  • 1. Labels and Interrelationships (Status
    markers)
  • Birth order
  • Kinship
  • Caste or class
  • Gender
  • Position at workplace or position in social order
  • Other

8
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • The internal point of view Frameworks by which
    people designate and interact with each other
    within the organization
  • 2. Status markers and their definition of the
    person
  • ? Ones identity is not simply personal and
    individual, but representative of a generic
    type who functions in a defined position within
    a web of social relations
  • ones cultural (or organizational) location
  • ? Note such rigid, performative roles are more
    commonly found in close-knit, densely populated,
    immobile societies. They provide the necessary
    personal distance among individuals.

9
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • IV. The internal point of view Social
    attribution frameworks
  • ? Symbolic means by which to sort people out
  • 1.Internal means of sorting and designating
    members of a society or organization
    contextualizing the person
  • By ethnic group
  • Within ethnic group, by family or clan membership
    (genealogy)
  • By village or place of origin
  • By occupation
  • Each person has more than one of these
    designations, and is known by a different
    designation depending on the narrower or wider
    social context
  • Identity is borrowed from the setting

10
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • The internal point of view Social attribution
    frameworks
  • 2. Looking at persons as though they were
    outlines waiting to be filled in, is part of a
    total pattern of social life
  • Distinctions made among persons within the same,
    but diverse, society by context of life and
    practices
  • Connections made among persons within the same,
    but diverse, society by context of personal
    choice (occupation, friendships, politics)

11
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • The internal point of view Social attribution
    frameworks
  • 3. Public identity as based in private arenas of
    life
  • Public interaction based on positional
    categories that are supposedly permanent and
    inherent
  • Private interaction based in subjective
    experience within the household and religious and
    neighbourhood groupings

12
Clifford Geertz, From the Natives Point of View
  • V. Back to the researchers point of view on
    the natives point of view other peoples
    subjectivities
  • Semiotic means by which people define each other
    within one society or organization
  • Semiotic means by which we (researchers) grasp
    their ways of doing this
  • Dialectic between extreme detail (thick
    descriptionethnography) and global (broad)
    conceptual structures and explanations
  • The hermeneutic circle researchers attempt to
    make details explain the concept and make
    concepts explain the details
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