{"id":564,"date":"2009-06-19T09:09:13","date_gmt":"2009-06-19T14:09:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/?p=564"},"modified":"2009-06-19T09:09:13","modified_gmt":"2009-06-19T14:09:13","slug":"reading-as-an-ethnographic-tactic","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/2009\/06\/19\/reading-as-an-ethnographic-tactic\/","title":{"rendered":"Reading as an ethnographic tactic"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>One of the things, totally unsurprising, about the social world where I&#8217;m working is that it&#8217;s full of texts. Even restricting ourselves to <em>written<\/em> texts, we find not only books but also articles, dissertations, textbooks, pamphlets, blog posts, media coverage, government proclamations, analyses of government proclamations, activist manifestos, online books, posters, banners, schedules, graffiti, email, text messages, announcements of the birth of professors&#8217; children, warnings not to break the sociology department copy machine, security warnings, maps and directional signs, historical placards, captions attached to bombastic statues, conference programs, course descriptions, online discussion forums, advertisements printed on the outside of bookstore sales bags, activist pin-on buttons, government ID badges, and the like. I&#8217;m sure this isn&#8217;t an exhaustive list of the written genres I&#8217;ve encountered \u2014 and of course, most of these genres are themselves <em>compound<\/em> genres containing other genres within. It would be a project in itself just to diagram these genres and analyze their interrelations and metapragmatics.<\/p>\n<p>With the onset of summer, I&#8217;m faced with the end of the academic year, the end of class meetings and conferences, the end of departmental meetings and protests, and hence the temporary loss of most of the usual opportunities for face-to-face ethnographic observation in the traditional sense. My field site is shutting down. But I&#8217;m trying to ask myself: what do I make of the fact that I still possess an wonderful, unmanageable number of printed pages, of written things, of texts, that I need to read? And that this reading is simultaneously a chance to do textual <em>analysis<\/em> but also, and this is what seems to deserve more attention, <em>a form of participant-observation in the world in question<\/em>. Academia is nothing if not a community of readers. What then are the tactical or theoretical implications of a summer spent reading in a project on academia?<\/p>\n<p><!--more-->It strikes me that my point of departure has to be this: that reading isn&#8217;t something I can approach as a form of <em>background knowledge<\/em>, as a source of pure <em>context<\/em>. Nor for that matter can reading be a form of pure textual decoding that serves only as an instrumentally necessary prelude to some type of textual analysis. Nor, for that matter, is this necessarily a matter of doing &#8220;ethnography of reading,&#8221; which is essentially a traditional ethnographic investigation of a given set of readers. Of course it&#8217;s important to examine local means of reading, interpretation and textual reception, as <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ucpress.edu\/books\/pages\/2790.php\">Jonathan Boyarin<\/a> or <a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=_rNicgIx6SkC&amp;dq=janice+radway+feeling+books&amp;printsec=frontcover&amp;source=bn&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=lFc7SpOQO5KZjAfhzNwj&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=4\">Janice Radway<\/a> or <a href=\"http:\/\/education.ucsb.edu\/bazerman\/\">Charles Bazerman<\/a> have done in various contexts from physics labs to Book of the Month Club editors. But still, what I&#8217;m interested in isn&#8217;t ethnography <em>of<\/em> reading but ethnography <em>as<\/em> reading. Sitting on a bench reading a book <em>as a way of being-there in an academic world<\/em>. Reading as a form of participation, not just of observation. After all, the locals are constantly trying to get me to partake in their common means of textual exchange, by constantly suggesting books for me to read. These book suggestions are of course themselves invaluable ethnographic data. But reading itself is a way of learning one&#8217;s way around a space, a way of retracing a set of thoughts or &#8220;probl\u00e9matiques,&#8221; a way of developing competences of comprehension and belonging for later use, a way of assimilating some of the aesthetic parameters of a social world, its characteristic framing devices, its cast of characters, its rhythm. There&#8217;s a reason why half of my conversations here revolve around who has read what: having read a text provides a source of social solidarity and a ground for further exchange.<\/p>\n<p>On a more theoretical level, in conceptualizing reading as a means of participation in an academic world, I think we must make a real effort to resist the temptation, always common, to theorize a social world as, above all, a world of physically co-present human beings in real-time social interaction. Rather we have to think of academic texts as moments in a complexly mediated and disaggregated social world, one where perhaps you can learn more about someone by reading their book than by having an hour-long interview. <a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=ksOjjuy3issC&amp;lpg=PA129&amp;ots=IjoYVamuhH&amp;dq=ursula%20k.%20le%20guin%20%22it's%20all%20there%22%20in%20the%20book&amp;pg=PA48\">Ursula K. Le Guin has beautifully asserted<\/a> that authors are, always, already there in their texts: &#8220;We write stories about imaginary people in imaginary situations. Then we publish them (because they are, in their strange way, acts of communication\u2014addressed to others). And then people read them and call up and say But who are you? tell us about yourself! And we say, <strong>But I have. It&#8217;s all there, in the book. All that matters.<\/strong>&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>I don&#8217;t know many true post-structuralists, but this blunt assertion of authorial presence should give them chest pains, if they happen to be reading this blog. Le Guin, incidentally, never claims that authors are the uniquely privileged interpreters of the texts they produce; but only that their texts, being the products of long labors of writing, provide evidence, acquaintance, knowledge of the author. This seems to me true, particularly for academic texts, which, with their thickets of formal citations and fairly clear displays of intellectual affiliation, are relatively useful guides to systems of professional relations. For example, there were certain sociologists who I already suspected to be quite politically different before I arrived in France, and who turn out, in fact, to be quite politically different. (A euphemism.)<\/p>\n<p>In this sense, one can read social relations out of texts, can read intellectual trajectories and movements out of texts, can read stylistic maneuvers and claims of authority or importance out of texts. To be sure, reading alone produces a rather limited and partial experience of an academic world. But the academic world would be equally inaccessible, maybe even incomprehensible, <em>without<\/em> reading. Because, again, reading is a form of participation. And one could go farther: reading is one of the constitutive forces of academic worlds, a practice of social and intellectual (re)production, an act of <a href=\"http:\/\/supervalentthought.com\/2009\/05\/13\/unworlding\/#more-153\">worlding<\/a> that yields a cosmos where there are landscapes of ideas and concepts, immaterial &#8220;schools of thought&#8221; and &#8220;intellectual trajectories,&#8221; clashes of ideology playing out at once in terms of pure theory and in terms of the job hiring process.<\/p>\n<p>Now, to do ethnography through reading as a way of examining textually mediated academic worlds is <em>not<\/em>, I emphasize, to become the kind of idealist semiotician who believes that there&#8217;s nothing outside the text. Is not to believe that everything human is a text. Is not to argue that anthropology is just hermeneutics or that every percept or behavior is a &#8220;cultural text.&#8221; I oppose those theorists who hold views of this sort. But I also don&#8217;t think that academic reality is reducible to its more obviously sociological dynamics (to positions on a disciplinary field, to institutional hierarchy and competition, etc). That kind of sociology tends to elide or minimize the cultural and intellectual <em>content<\/em> of the world it dissects. A better way of thinking about academic life would perhaps begin neither from the institutional infrastructure nor from the purely intellectual dynamics, but rather from an analysis of the <em>relations of intellectual production<\/em>, a theoretical placeholder term that I hope to think through before long.<\/p>\n<p>Will try to post more often. Coming up soon: photographic analysis of academic pride parades; preliminary readings of some recent French philosophical work on the university; perhaps notes on my somewhat problematic relationship to the French language&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>One of the things, totally unsurprising, about the social world where I&#8217;m working is that it&#8217;s full of texts. Even restricting ourselves to written texts, we find not only books but also articles, dissertations, textbooks, pamphlets, blog posts, media coverage, government proclamations, analyses of government proclamations, activist manifestos, online books, posters, banners, schedules, graffiti, email, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[486,498],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/564"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=564"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/564\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=564"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=564"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/decasia.org\/academic_culture\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=564"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}