Text and context : some issues in Warlpiri ethnography
Abstract
This thesis is concerned with the way in which particular aspects of Warlpiri ethnography have been
inescapably contextualised by intellectual, institutional and political conditions of
anthropological practice. Recent literature has opened up new perspectives on the relation between
ethnography and its subjects. These concerns do not, however, address the broader political
implications of anthropological representation, nor the means by which one form or style of
ethnographic writing and analysis rather than another becomes dominant and accepted as valid.
Certain conventions developed internationally were decisive in constraining the means by which
anthropological knowledge could be constructed and communicated. This situation went largely
unrecognised by anthropologists, participating as they were within unquestioned historically and
politically determined parameters "authorised" by the Anglophone interpretive community. The
dominance of this paradigm was transferred to Australia, where national considerations too shaped
the acceptable canons of ethnographic writing.
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