In the Workshop: Anthropology in a Collaborative Zone of Inquiry

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

In the Workshop : Anthropology in a Collaborative Zone of Inquiry. / Stavrianakis, Anthony; Rabinow, Paul; Korsby, Trine Mygind.

The Composition of Anthropology: How Anthropological Texts are Written. ed. / Morten Nielsen; Nigel Rapport. London : Routledge, 2018. p. 169-192.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Stavrianakis, A, Rabinow, P & Korsby, TM 2018, In the Workshop: Anthropology in a Collaborative Zone of Inquiry. in M Nielsen & N Rapport (eds), The Composition of Anthropology: How Anthropological Texts are Written. Routledge, London, pp. 169-192.

APA

Stavrianakis, A., Rabinow, P., & Korsby, T. M. (2018). In the Workshop: Anthropology in a Collaborative Zone of Inquiry. In M. Nielsen, & N. Rapport (Eds.), The Composition of Anthropology: How Anthropological Texts are Written (pp. 169-192). Routledge.

Vancouver

Stavrianakis A, Rabinow P, Korsby TM. In the Workshop: Anthropology in a Collaborative Zone of Inquiry. In Nielsen M, Rapport N, editors, The Composition of Anthropology: How Anthropological Texts are Written. London: Routledge. 2018. p. 169-192

Author

Stavrianakis, Anthony ; Rabinow, Paul ; Korsby, Trine Mygind. / In the Workshop : Anthropology in a Collaborative Zone of Inquiry. The Composition of Anthropology: How Anthropological Texts are Written. editor / Morten Nielsen ; Nigel Rapport. London : Routledge, 2018. pp. 169-192

Bibtex

@inbook{e67faea0a8704d5c92a7e8cfc4f5947c,
title = "In the Workshop: Anthropology in a Collaborative Zone of Inquiry",
abstract = "The chapter by Anthony Stavrianakis, Paul Rabinow and Trine Korsby is an exercise in collaborative thinking and writing. The exercise begins with Max Weber{\textquoteright}s judgement that {\textquoteleft}zones of inquiry{\textquoteright} are formed through the conceptual interconnection of {\textquoteleft}problems{\textquoteright}. The authors take up this objective relative to a series of {\textquoteleft}objects of inquiry{\textquoteright}: they narrate the manner in which a zone of inquiry, focused on problems, stemming from inquiry, might be forged collaboratively. The chapter is written in three broad movements: First, {\textquoteleft}objects of inquiry{\textquoteright} are narrated in an initial sequence of TEXTS; second, in a sequence of COMMENTARIES, the authors seek to draw out the conceptual operations and abstractions through which {\textquoteleft}problems{\textquoteright} could be shared; third, they test the abstracted problems relative to their objects of inquiry in a further sequence of TEXTS and COMMENTARIES. The chapter thus puts into motion an assemblage of heterogeneous objects, practices and concepts, and shows the narrative forms through which conceptual interconnections could be tested.",
author = "Anthony Stavrianakis and Paul Rabinow and Korsby, {Trine Mygind}",
year = "2018",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-138-20812-4",
pages = "169--192",
editor = "Morten Nielsen and Nigel Rapport",
booktitle = "The Composition of Anthropology",
publisher = "Routledge",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - In the Workshop

T2 - Anthropology in a Collaborative Zone of Inquiry

AU - Stavrianakis, Anthony

AU - Rabinow, Paul

AU - Korsby, Trine Mygind

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - The chapter by Anthony Stavrianakis, Paul Rabinow and Trine Korsby is an exercise in collaborative thinking and writing. The exercise begins with Max Weber’s judgement that ‘zones of inquiry’ are formed through the conceptual interconnection of ‘problems’. The authors take up this objective relative to a series of ‘objects of inquiry’: they narrate the manner in which a zone of inquiry, focused on problems, stemming from inquiry, might be forged collaboratively. The chapter is written in three broad movements: First, ‘objects of inquiry’ are narrated in an initial sequence of TEXTS; second, in a sequence of COMMENTARIES, the authors seek to draw out the conceptual operations and abstractions through which ‘problems’ could be shared; third, they test the abstracted problems relative to their objects of inquiry in a further sequence of TEXTS and COMMENTARIES. The chapter thus puts into motion an assemblage of heterogeneous objects, practices and concepts, and shows the narrative forms through which conceptual interconnections could be tested.

AB - The chapter by Anthony Stavrianakis, Paul Rabinow and Trine Korsby is an exercise in collaborative thinking and writing. The exercise begins with Max Weber’s judgement that ‘zones of inquiry’ are formed through the conceptual interconnection of ‘problems’. The authors take up this objective relative to a series of ‘objects of inquiry’: they narrate the manner in which a zone of inquiry, focused on problems, stemming from inquiry, might be forged collaboratively. The chapter is written in three broad movements: First, ‘objects of inquiry’ are narrated in an initial sequence of TEXTS; second, in a sequence of COMMENTARIES, the authors seek to draw out the conceptual operations and abstractions through which ‘problems’ could be shared; third, they test the abstracted problems relative to their objects of inquiry in a further sequence of TEXTS and COMMENTARIES. The chapter thus puts into motion an assemblage of heterogeneous objects, practices and concepts, and shows the narrative forms through which conceptual interconnections could be tested.

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-1-138-20812-4

SP - 169

EP - 192

BT - The Composition of Anthropology

A2 - Nielsen, Morten

A2 - Rapport, Nigel

PB - Routledge

CY - London

ER -

ID: 188810809