Ethnography Lab

Ethnography Lab The Ethnography Lab at U of T promotes ethnographic research methods and practice in the university

Ethnography Lab is a public research organization based in Canada's University of Toronto. It gathers researchers and community members who use ethnography to collect and disseminate cutting-edge knowledge about the changing social world around us.

Please join us tomorrow for an important workshop about using Google search engines for social science research.
10/09/2024

Please join us tomorrow for an important workshop about using Google search engines for social science research.

On October 10, 2024, a design workshop led by Koray Caliskan will explore how social scientists can utilize design to understand economic dynamics within organizations, focusing on Google’s s…

EVENT TOMORROW: Navigating Dangerous Fields
09/27/2024

EVENT TOMORROW:
Navigating Dangerous Fields

A University of Toronto Anthropology initiative

https://ethnographylab.ca/2024/09/23/navigating-dangerous-fields-storytelling-waiting-and-ethnography-as-not-writing-dow...
09/23/2024

https://ethnographylab.ca/2024/09/23/navigating-dangerous-fields-storytelling-waiting-and-ethnography-as-not-writing-down-by-omer-ozcan/

Please join us for the second Ethnography Lab 2024/2025 event.

Dr. Omer Ozcan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto, and he holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Texas at Austin. His work focuses on the temporal and spatial effects of militarization and human rights violations in Turkey. Approaching waiting as a distinct temporal orientation and modes of political action, his work explores how local Kurds withstand, challenge, and evade spatiotemporal restrictions and human rights violations that shape the rhythm of everyday life in the Kurdish borderlands. He currently works on his book manuscript, Strategic Waiting: Violence, Mobility, and Agency in the Kurdish Borderlands in Turkey.

n the summer of 2012, when the war between the Kurdish guerrillas and the Turkish army reached a crescendo, I started my ethnographic research in Gever (Yüksekova in Turkish), a Kurdish border town…

Upcoming Methods Café on Feb. 3rd: The Scholar-Activist, Featuring Dr. Anima AdjepongPlease join the Ethnography Lab and...
01/20/2023

Upcoming Methods Café on Feb. 3rd: The Scholar-Activist, Featuring Dr. Anima Adjepong

Please join the Ethnography Lab and the Department of Anthropology's Professionalization Committee for the first installment of the Lab’s Winter term Methods Café series: The Scholar-Activist: A conversation on how an academic navigates different roles: fieldworker, activist, collaborator, and social organizer, featuring Dr. Anima Adjepong.

Date: February 3
Time: 1-2:30 pm
Location: Zoom event, RSVP at tinyurl.com/vzd4rzfh.

Our invited guest is Dr. Anima Adjepong (they/them) who is a sociologist, critical race, gender, and sexualities scholar. Their primary focus is Ghanaian cultural politics and social justice efforts across the African diaspora. Dr. Adjepong is an Assistant Professor of Women's Gender and Sexualities Studies at the University of Cincinnati and a member of Silent Majority Ghana as well as actively involved in transnational q***r feminist activism. Their book Afropolitan Projects: Redefining Blackness, Sexualities, and Culture from Houston to Accra has been published by the University of North Carolina Press (2021).

This event will be co-hosted by Dr. Girish Daswani.

*This event is part of the Ethnography Lab’s “Methods Café” series. Methods Cafés are typically lunch hour talks by practicing ethnographers on a specific aspect of ethnographic methods. In the past, the Ethnography Lab has hosted Cafés on gamestorming, surveys, and sound techniques, archival research, among others.
Check out our website—ethnographylab.ca —for information on upcoming Cafés or follow us on social media at .

We're Hiring! - Apply with the short application package by Dec. 15, 2022. The Ethnography Lab team is hiring a new co-c...
12/01/2022

We're Hiring! - Apply with the short application package by Dec. 15, 2022.

The Ethnography Lab team is hiring a new co-coordinator for the 2022-2023 academic year. Click the link below for more details.

We'd like to encourage folks who are new to the Lab the apply as well, especially folks with an interest in ethnographic methods. The Lab is an informal and welcoming space for grad students, faculty, and community members to explore and experiment with ethnographic methods. You're very welcome to shoot me (Wesley Brunson) an email at [email protected] to learn more about what we do and about the co-coordinator role in general.

Application deadline: December 15, 2022
Start date: January 1, 2023
Length of contract: Six months with a possibility of extension
Hours: Approximately 25 hours/month (flexible)
Rate of pay: Expected to be $31.57 per hour (funding dependent)

*preference will be given to UofT Anthropology graduate students
*preference will be given to candidates based in Toronto for the 2022-2023 academic year

To apply, send the following by email to: [email protected] -

A curriculum vitae, a short bio (max 150 words), and a statement explaining why you are interested in acting as the Ethnography Lab Co-coordinator, your experience with ethnography, your leadership skills, and your availability (maximum 250 words).

For the full posting visit - https://ethnographylab.ca/2022/12/01/were-hiring-a-co-coordinator-2/

Please join us for the roundtable discussion: Sounds of/like A Mixed Use Neighborhood, Community and Conflict in Post-Lo...
11/08/2022

Please join us for the roundtable discussion: Sounds of/like A Mixed Use Neighborhood, Community and Conflict in Post-Lockdown Kensington!

Date: November 16, 2022

Time: 5-6 PM

Location: AP 246, Department of Anthropology

At this roundtable, members of the Kensington Market Soundscape Study will present preliminary research and methodological reflections from their summer work at Kensington Market and at the Market’s Pedestrian Sundays. Topics will include a multimodal experimental film presentation, a presentation on soundwalks as a method, and multimedia sound recording, among others.

The Kensington Market Soundscapes Study (KMSS) is a community-engaged team research project investigating the presence of amplified music and other human-produced sounds in the KM neighborhood’s public realm. The study involves a partnership with the Kensington Market Business Improvement Area, an association of more than 200 commercial property owners and tenants in the Kensington neighborhood and the organization responsible for organizing the summer Pedestrian Sundays Kensington (PSK) festival. Join members of the KMSS research team as they discuss different aspects of the project, from team ethnography to volunteering-as-research to experimental arts-based methods.

For more info on KMSS – https://kensingtonmarket.music.utoronto.ca/2022-summer-soundscape-project/

10/11/2022

APPLICATION DEADLINE TODAY

Join the Ethnography Lab! A call for Student Convener Applications

The Ethnography Lab would like to announce the opening of several volunteer convener positions to provide unique opportunities for ethnography-focused collaborations, mentorship, research, projects, and presentations based on thematic interests. The call is open to undergraduate and graduate students across all three campuses and disciplines.

The Ethnography Lab invites applications for up to four (4) volunteer conveners to join our community starting mid-October 2022. The duration of the role is October 2022 to April 2023, with the possibility of extending to August 2023 or beyond, based on the type and success of the project and budget.

The Ethnography Lab Student Convener role is open to current students at the University of Toronto who have a strong interest in ethnography as a method, a form of writing, and a research perspective, and who are motivated to lead a group of participants in initiating and managing a project or activity that will contribute to the Ethnography Lab’s mission to promote ethnography in academic and public inquiries. Each convener will be responsible for recruiting participants and organizing projects or activities related to a specific ethnographic topic or theme. Themes may be related to one of our existing priority areas: visual and sensory ethnography, urban ethnography, infrastructure ethnography, ethnography in Canada, and undergraduate ethnography, or the theme may be a new topic proposed by the applicant. Examples of activities that conveners might initiate include: organizing a small conference or speaker series, establishing a reading and discussion group, curating an ethnographic or autoethnographic art collection, preparing a publication, creating a blog or podcast series, organizing community outreach events, writing op-eds, etc.

Conveners are expected to hold a bi-weekly meeting with their participants in the Ethnography Lab and contribute to peer learning, collaboration, and teamwork. Conveners should be prepared to participate in a public presentation or seminar at the end of April and to share their projects through the Ethnography Lab website. Conveners will work with the coordinator and become a part of the Ethnography Lab community.

The role carries with it a modest budget for activity or event expenses (for example, refreshments and poster printing for events), mentorship, access to a computer and printing, audio recorders, relevant software, and website access. Conveners may use the Ethnography Lab seminar room in the Department of Anthropology for their meetings and/or events.

To apply, send the following by email to: [email protected]

A curriculum vitae;

A short bio (100 words);

A budget for your proposed activities (optional);

The name of the interest group or your plan to convene (e.g. visual or sensory ethnography, urban ethnography, infrastructure ethnography, or other), and a project or activity title and description of the project, activity, event, etc. you plan to organize (about one paragraph, 1-page max) [e.g. conference or speaker series, reading group, publication, creating a blog or podcast series, organizing community outreach events, writing op-eds, etc.].

Deadline: October 11, 2022. Start Date: October 15. More about the Ethnography Lab: ethnographylab.ca

Thank you to everyone who came out to our Opening Event and shared their ideas about ethnographic methods and practice! ...
10/07/2022

Thank you to everyone who came out to our Opening Event and shared their ideas about ethnographic methods and practice! We're excited for the coming year and to put these ideas into action!

10/03/2022

Join the Ethnography Lab! A call for Student Convener Applications

The Ethnography Lab would like to announce the opening of several volunteer convener positions to provide unique opportunities for ethnography-focused collaborations, mentorship, research, projects, and presentations based on thematic interests. The call is open to undergraduate and graduate students across all three campuses and disciplines.

The Ethnography Lab invites applications for up to four (4) volunteer conveners to join our community starting mid-October 2022. The duration of the role is October 2022 to April 2023, with the possibility of extending to August 2023 or beyond, based on the type and success of the project and budget.

The Ethnography Lab Student Convener role is open to current students at the University of Toronto who have a strong interest in ethnography as a method, a form of writing, and a research perspective, and who are motivated to lead a group of participants in initiating and managing a project or activity that will contribute to the Ethnography Lab’s mission to promote ethnography in academic and public inquiries. Each convener will be responsible for recruiting participants and organizing projects or activities related to a specific ethnographic topic or theme. Themes may be related to one of our existing priority areas: visual and sensory ethnography, urban ethnography, infrastructure ethnography, ethnography in Canada, and undergraduate ethnography, or the theme may be a new topic proposed by the applicant. Examples of activities that conveners might initiate include: organizing a small conference or speaker series, establishing a reading and discussion group, curating an ethnographic or autoethnographic art collection, preparing a publication, creating a blog or podcast series, organizing community outreach events, writing op-eds, etc.

Conveners are expected to hold a bi-weekly meeting with their participants in the Ethnography Lab and contribute to peer learning, collaboration, and teamwork. Conveners should be prepared to participate in a public presentation or seminar at the end of April and to share their projects through the Ethnography Lab website. Conveners will work with the coordinator and become a part of the Ethnography Lab community.

The role carries with it a modest budget for activity or event expenses (for example, refreshments and poster printing for events), mentorship, access to a computer and printing, audio recorders, relevant software, and website access. Conveners may use the Ethnography Lab seminar room in the Department of Anthropology for their meetings and/or events.

To apply, send the following by email to: [email protected]

A curriculum vitae;

A short bio (100 words);

A budget for your proposed activities (optional);

The name of the interest group or your plan to convene (e.g. visual or sensory ethnography, urban ethnography, infrastructure ethnography, or other), and a project or activity title and description of the project, activity, event, etc. you plan to organize (about one paragraph, 1-page max) [e.g. conference or speaker series, reading group, publication, creating a blog or podcast series, organizing community outreach events, writing op-eds, etc.].

Deadline: October 11, 2022. Start Date: October 15. More about the Ethnography Lab: ethnographylab.ca

Please join us for our 2022-23 opening year event!Ethnographic Potential and Practice: A Conversation (lunch provided!)D...
09/22/2022

Please join us for our 2022-23 opening year event!

Ethnographic Potential and Practice: A Conversation (lunch provided!)

Date: Oct. 7, 2022

Time: 12-1:30 pm

Location: AP246, 19 Russell St.

Please join the Ethnography Lab as we kick off a new year of programming and activities. This year marks the first time since the pandemic began that the Lab will host meetings in person. We’re excited and a little nervous to be working face to face again—no doubt we have a lot to learn from each other. So, please join us as we ponder questions of ethnographic method and desire. We’ll consider, collectively, questions such as: What does ethnographic research look like in our projects and in other’s projects? What might ethnography be imagined into? What do we feel like we still need to learn to successfully conduct our ethnographic projects? New graduate students are especially welcome!

There will be pizza and refreshments. All those who use or are curious about ethnographic methods and practice are welcome!

Reminder to APPLY BY TOMORROW, SEPT 20TH!!---The University of Toronto Ethnography Lab is extremely pleased to announce ...
09/19/2022

Reminder to APPLY BY TOMORROW, SEPT 20TH!!

---

The University of Toronto Ethnography Lab is extremely pleased to announce a singular opportunity for graduate students to participate in an innovative research initiative together with ethnography labs in Montreal (Concordia U.), Los Angeles (USC), Philadelphia (UPenn), and Kelowna in BC (UBC). Funded by a SSHRC Partnership Development Grant, the initiative seeks to explore the ethnographic possibilities of research conducted across a network of labs.

We are seeking three advanced University of Toronto graduate students to join our Ethnography Lab team. Tasks will include some or all of the following: design, conduct, analyze and disseminate research in collaboration with other Toronto team members; design experiments in multimodal ethnographic research methods and research mobilization; participate in virtual and in-person network meetings, workshops and conferences with students and faculty from other labs; travel to and participation in research conducted at other labs; host student researchers from other labs in Toronto.

This network initiative will unfold over the course of the next three years, and the pace of project activities will vary over that time; however, the current cohort of students should be available for initial meetings in early October (~6 hrs) and for approximately 50-100 hrs of work between January 2023 and the end of summer 2023.

Remuneration: To be rated, but we expect it to be $30.00 to 35.00/hour + vacation pay & benefits, in accordance with UofT employment rules.

Applicants should have experience in designing, conducting, and analyzing ethnographic research; experience in working in more-than-textual media and/or web design a plus; must have the ability to work independently as well as work collaboratively with others.

Interested applicants should send in a short statement of interest that includes a description of ethnographic research experience, as well as a c.v., to [email protected] by September 20, 2023.

For more information, feel free to contact: [email protected]

Address

19 Russell Street, Room 330, ON, Canada
Toronto, ON
M5S2S2

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Ethnography Lab posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share