hello co-learners!
here is what i plan to do this quarter.
i welcome feedback,
thanks for your time,
kellan m
P.S. I have also attached it in case you don't
want
to read it off of the email.
Dear David, Yvonne, and Raul,
October 3, 2005
This is my project proposal for Reconciliation
Fall
2005:
I am interested in the all-encompassing and the
universal. This quarter I plan to study culture through the
disciplines
of ethnography and cultural anthropology. I want to get a sense
of what
these disciplines bring to the table of human sciences and how
to think
in anthropological terms. I will begin to accomplish this by
reading
books by anthropologists and ethnographers about their
philosophies on
culture and also books that regard specific experiences in
cultural
immersion (A.K.A. ethnographies). I am chiefly interested in the
working class.
I will seek out an elderly person in my community
that is willing to hang out and talk to me about their life
through
telling stories. I will transcribe these stories and write a
human
interest piece about this person’s life. At the end of the
quarter, I
hope to give them my finished piece. Ultimately I would like to
get
deeper into storytelling to see how oral tradition passes
culture from
generation to generation.
In addition to this, I will do fieldwork for two
hours every week. My fieldwork will be conducted at the same
time and
place each week. The venue I choose will be public (obviously)
and
diverse (ideally). I will take rough notes on my observations
and then
transform them into an interpretation of the cultures at hand. I
plan
to use How to Write Ethnographic Fieldnotes as a guide.
I also plan to write a response to each of the ten
or
eleven books I read and at the end of the quarter write a
cumulative
paper regarding my impressions of cultural anthropology and
ethnography
today.
I am currently collecting resources for this
project.
I have spoken with Sam Shrager (TESC faculty and ethnographer)
and also
a friend who is a cultural anthropology major at Western
Washington
University. If any of you have additional resources (maybe you
are a
resource), I would appreciate any names or texts you can
recommend me.
I would also appreciate feedback on the context of what I am
embarking
on this quarter. Is this plan too vague? Do you have any tips on
how to
sharpen or enrich it? I want to study what culture is, its part
in
society, and how to study it effectively. Next quarter I plan to
move
into studying a specific culture. I also want to travel to Peru
with
Raoul.
Thanks for your time,
Sincerely,
Kellan M
Mackel06@evergreen.edu
Fieldwork/Observation 3 kellan
m - 09:12pm Oct 31, 2005 PST
10/27/2005 9:21AM West Olympia Food Co-op
This morning is foggy and cold. I rearrange flyers on the bulletin
board to get my 8 x 11” saffron paper to fit. My ad is seeking
stories.
I want to spend time listening and talking to the elderly in my
neighborhood in order to write a human-interest story-- a
preservation
of a piece of their culture and life (as interpreted through my ears
and imagination).
Inside there is a different cashier than the
past two Thursday mornings. He is an older man: tall, thin, his hair
is
shaggy and gray. Is he developing a mullet? His features are pinched
to
the middle of his face: beady eyes, pointy nose. He talks to each
customer he checks out. He asks how they are doing, tries to find
out
something about their life, and also commences to tell them about
himself.
I want to take a different approach this week. I have been reading
about writing field notes and am trying not to rely on jottings as
much
as I have been. My new approach is absorption/osmosis and
interaction.
I walk into the co-op, say hi to the cashier, and ensue to walk
through
each aisle even though I don’t need or want to buy anything. I
notice
who is working and what they are doing and talking about. Kitty and
Patrice are here and so is the San Francisco Street Bakery
deliveryman.
I say hello to him. A young guy that looks like he could be a
Greener
or Ex-greener is volunteering/working (I don’t know which). He is
wearing a red bandana that is folded into a strip and tied around
his
head. He also wears black pants that are not tight, but fit him
snuggly, low-top Converse sneakers (worn out), a thick black belt
with
keys attached to it, and shaggy hair in disheveled, dirty curls. I
am
trying to become comfortable here. Comfortable without having the
purpose of buying something, but I am still walking around looking
at
products, sampling, and reading labels. I guess that is a part of
this
fieldwork—knowing what and where everything is; intimately
understanding why people come here and what they buy. Patrice is
stocking the freezer. Seems like she has gotten a haircut. I try to
make eye contact with her in order to say hello, but it doesn’t
happen
naturally and I don’t want to force it. I look at the bookshelf
carefully and then mosey over to the magazine shelf to half-read and
listen to people talking around me. There is a lot of progressive
reading to be done at the co-op, with the exception of an Asian New
York-style-pop culture magazine. It is very posh seeming, almost
elitist. It is interesting how most of the contributors are (or look
like) of European descent. I wonder what that is about. Does race
matter? One girl I recognize from last week buying natural pads is
now
here buying natural toilet paper. I pick up a Clamor: The Revolution
of
Everyday Life magazine and flip through it. I read a section called
Things I Wish Someone Would’ve Told Me. The cashier informs me that
there is an article about the Olympia Free School in Clamor. I tell
him
that’s the reason I picked it up. He is friendly and makes me feel
welcome to hang around and observe. He chats me up about a web
design
class he is teaching at the Oly Free School. As long as I talk to
him I
don’t feel like I am in the way. I like talking to him and observing
how he interacts with the people he helps. He gives them individual
energy and attention and usually ends up telling them about himself
more than having a casual dialogue. But he’s not annoying about
it—he’s
just involved and likes talking to everyone. Ben comes up behind me
with a package of salami, a croissant, and an Amazon juice/smoothie
thing. Underneath his eye is bruised in a line…a fight? I don’t ask.
I
give him my number. He tells me he can get me into any show in
Olympia
even though I am not twenty-one yet. He can get me into shows
because
he is on the circuit of local performers. The Essential Bakery
deliveryman is here. He puts the old bread into a bag and I am
tempted
to ask where it goes…the cashier and I keep talking. He tells me
about
a trip his church is taking to Costa Rica. He is also involved with
the
Olympia soccer community. He recommends I go hang out on Sundays if
I
want to practice Spanish with native speakers. He suggests this
because
I told Ben about Reconciliation. The cashier and I introduce
ourselves.
His name is Scott. When Scott was a kid, he would listen to a radio
show during WWII where the Germans spoke German, the French spoke
French, and the Americans spoke English. He absorbed some of the
language and thinks it was easier for him to learn French because of
it. I buy some ginger chews for mom, talk to Scott about the web
page
he designed for the Free Store and then walk over to it.
I notice that it is important for me to write about my experiences
observing directly after they happen. I also notice that I would
like
to spend more time becoming aware of the physical aspect of the
space I
am inhabiting: the co-op’s layout, the smell of it, what the tiles
of
the floor look like, what plants are present, and describing the
mural
on the back wall. Just things I need to keep in mind for next time.