Embodiment in Ethnographic Collaborations

Composition, Movement, and Pausing within the Multiple Sclerosis Society in Russia

Authors

Abstract

This article – grounded in ethnographic fieldwork within the organization of chronic patients with multiple sclerosis in Russia – empiricizes and problematizes the work it takes to craft ethnographic collaborations with care. We attend to the notion of collaboration ‘from a body’, or, rather, from bodies-in-movement. By scrutinizing three turning points of our ethnographic fieldwork along with our relations with partners in the field, we specify how movement matters in ethnographic collaborations. Attention to the embodiment work allows us to specify the energy and resources such collaborations ask for and that are otherwise silenced or neglected. We distinguish three instances of embodiment work in such collaborations – composition, moving with and being moved by, as well as pausing. By attending to how ‘we know’ through crafting and maintaining ethnographic collaborations, this article contributes to a broader question of how to care for differences in ethnographic collaborations.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Section
Special Issue: Methodography of Ethnographic Collaboration

Published

2021-03-23 — Updated on 2021-09-15

Versions

How to Cite

Endaltseva, A. and Jerak-Zuiderent, S. (2021) “Embodiment in Ethnographic Collaborations: Composition, Movement, and Pausing within the Multiple Sclerosis Society in Russia”, Science & Technology Studies, 34(3), pp. 38–54. doi: 10.23987/sts.96101.