To Be Black, Female, and Conscious: Reflections on Fieldwork in Pre-Impeachment Brazil
Meryleen MenaBetween Notes and Diaries: Ethnographic Notes, Coevalness, and Positionality
Kamal KariemFrom Anxiety to Method: Recollections of fieldwork and note-taking in a Kuranko Village (Sierra Leone)
Michael JacksonBeing Noted
Daena Aki FunahashiWriter’s Block
Amelia Frank-VitaleMessy but Nurturing: Strategies for Engaging Fieldnotes
Laís Gomes DuarteMobilizing words and cultivating change: Taking notes during the pandemic strikes in Colombia
Miryam NacimentoMapping a Precarious Fieldwork: Fieldnotes as Reflexive Companion
Geoffroy CarpierTaking Note: Introduction
Magdalena Zegarra Chiappori and Verónica SousaIntimate Precarities: Growing Old in Lima, Peru
Magdalena Zegarra ChiapporiSophia Stamatopoulou-Robbins on Infrastructure in Palestine
Yours Sincerely, Concerned About Consent
Nicole Constable and Jen ShannonElizabeth Cullen Dunn on Ukrainian Sovereignty
Borders of Care: Ethnography with the Monarch Butterfly
Columba Gonzalez-DuarteAccessible Atmospheres and Medically Assisted Death: Dignity, Oppression, and the Eugenic Impulse in Canada
Sophia Jaworski“Be Strong Like a Kitchen Cabinet”: Indestructible Objects as Symbols of Resistance in Ukraine
Alisa SopovaSovereignty in Settler Colonial Times: Kinship and Education in the Tibetan Exile Community
Dawa LokyitsangThe 25th Anniversary of “Spatializing Culture: The Social Production and Social Construction of Public Space in Costa Rica”
Recognizing Authority and Respecting Expertise in Language Work
Mark TurinWhat Does Anonymity Mean in Anthropological Filmmaking?
Carlo A. CuberoNames are Problems: For Congolese Refugees, for the Humanitarian System, and for Anthropological Writing
Marnie Jane ThomsonBetween Organizational Narratives and Individual Stories: Pseudonyms Revisited
Miia Halme-TuomisaariPseudonyms as Anti-Citation
Erica WeissCollapsing Distance: Recognition, Relation, and the Power of Naming in Ethnographic Research
Sara Shneiderman