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ethnography A method of deep research, involving spending considerable periods of time with a particular community or group of people. Audience ethnography was important in establishing Cultural Studies and has been important in developing work on audiences within Media Studies.
Ãâó: freespace.virgin.net/brendan.richards/glossary/glo...
ethnography The anthropological study of societies in existence at the time of the study. Generally, the observation and organized description of current human behavior or behavior that is remembered by living people.
Ãâó: www.indiana.edu/~e472/cdf/proginfo/definitions.htm...
ethnography A method of studying and learning about a person or group of people. Typically, ethnography involves the study of a small group of people in their own environment. Rather than looking at a small set of variables and a large number of subjects ('the big picture'), the ethnographer attempts to get a detailed understanding of the circumstances of the relatively few people being studied, which can be from any race or culture throughout the world.
Ãâó: www.channel4.com/history/microsites/H/history/brow...
ethnography the study of the origin, characteristics, and distribution of different cultural and ethnic groups
Ãâó: www3.newberry.org/k12maps/glossary/
ethnography A branch of anthropology that studies and describes modern human cultures (rather than human behavior or physical attributes). Archaeologists sometimes work with ethnographers in an effort to correlate behavior with material remains.
Ãâó: www.archaeological.org/webinfo.php
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