'As every ethnographer recognises, fieldwork looks back as it looks forward. This elegant collection with contributions by leading scholars makes the point clearly and powerfully. Ghost inhabit our research as they should as we are inspired or troubled by past studies. Ethnography's Ghosts is a creative push to engage beyoind the present and to walk arm in arm with our ghostly ancestors.' Gary Alan Fine, Northwestern University and Emory University, USA. 'Returning to one's field notebooks allows the past observed, the present of observation, and the anticipated future to be reanimated, creating a reflective temporal tension. The authors offer lucid and original reflections on the role of memory, personal archives, and intellectual ancestors in shaping ethnographic knowledge. These essays illuminate the temporal and reflexive dimensions of fieldwork, capturing how emotion lies at the very heart of ethnographic inquiry.
' Silvia Cataldi, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy. 'The forward momentum created by ever stronger pressures to publish mean that we rarely pause to take stock of our creations, let alone the shoulders on which we (often precariously) stand. Beyond wonderful insight into the production of ethnographies, this elegant collection of essays is a prompt for us to do likewise: to revisit the 'ghosts' of Christmas past - the flotsam and happy accidents, self-destructive choices and occasional moments of clarity - that continue to shape us, and our writing, today.' Mark de Rond, Cambridge University, UK. 'This imaginative collection explores ethnographers' processes of re-engagementwith their own research. Through relational acts of remembering, reviewing, reviving and reflecting, we dynamically encounterour ghostly source materials from archival fieldnotes to influential ancestors and past versions of ourselves. Refreshingly creative, the book makes a valuable contribution to qualitative research methodology.' Susie Scott, University of Sussex, UK.