The Dictionary of Human Geography

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rather than more dynamic, relational and con-
tested forms of evidence, many fieldwork prac-
titioners developed a more critical stance to
their work. Feminist geographers (seefemi-
nist geographies) were key in this interven-
tion, examining the politics ofrepresentation
that percolate through fieldwork, scrutinizing
the uneven power relations that propel it and
calling its epistemological claims into question
(Rose, 1993; Professional Geographer, 1994;
Sundberg, 2003).
Engaging in fieldwork of this kind raises the
question of what constitutes the field. The
field, as Felix Driver (2000, p. 267) reminds
us, ‘is not just ‘‘there’’; it is produced and re-
produced through both physical movement
across a landscape and other sorts of cultural
work in a variety of sites’. It is also the effect of
discursive and spatial practices that mark it as
a site of enquiry ‘that is necessarily artificial
in its separations from geographicalspaceand
the flow oftime’ (Katz, 1994, p. 67). These
distinctions and the sorts of knowledge
derived from them are constituted through
embodied practices such as travel, residence,
visiting, conversation, observing, eating,
smelling, listening and various (re)presenta-
tions of self. The field and the fieldworker
are co-constructions, and the knowledge pro-
duced between them reflects the materiality
and mutability of this relationship. Scholars
have addressed the various and multiple con-
notations of movement among fields – the
constitution of a field site, the way in which
the site and the sorts of knowledge produced
there are constructed in one’s disciplinary
field, and the uneven valences ofpowerthat
energize and can confound the multiple trans-
lations – spatial, linguistic, and practical – of
fieldwork (e.g.Professional Geographer, 1994;
Pluciennik and Drew, 2000; Saunders, 2001).
Questions of power affect such things as nego-
tiating access, whether and how to conduct
research in areas ofconflictandviolence,
determining what kinds of knowledge can be
shared and with whom, figuring out what can-
not be said and making sense of the silences,
and representing oneself in ‘the field’ and the
field to one’s audience.
The methodology of fieldwork is cap-
acious and eclectic, encompassing quantitative
and qualitative strategies of data collection.
While fieldwork is commonly associated with
case studymethodologies andethnographic
research, it also includes survey research,
broad observational studies, mapping and
measurement techniques. Among the research
methods associated with fieldwork in human


geography are all manner of field observation,
including participant observation, land-
scape assessment and site observation; oral
techniques such as casual conversation,
unstructured and structured interviews,focus
group interviews, oral histories and environ-
mental autobiographies; survey and census
techniques (see survey analysis); digging
through, collecting, sorting, classifying and
interpreting records, whether in the ground,
in place or in archives; measurement and map-
ping activities; and documenting what is
observed and experienced in a variety of ways,
including written, photographic, cartographic,
aural and artistic means. Recent investigations
of fieldwork have addressed issues such as the
embodiment of the fieldworker (seebody),
bringing companions to the field, sexual rela-
tions in the field, and theethicsand implica-
tions of dishonesty and misrepresentation in
fieldwork. As these concerns suggest, field-
work produces knowledge that is avowedly
situated, and its validity resides both in that
recognition and in the disciplinedreflexivity
that enables researchers to expose their prac-
tices and question their findings. ck

Suggested reading
Geographical Review (2001); The Professional
Geographer(1994);Singapore Journal of Tropical
Geography(2003); Wolf (1995).

film An inherently spatial technology
through which fragments of images and
sounds from different times and spaces are
reassembled, and then transported to audi-
ences in many different locations. It can be
studied as a mobile culturalrepresentation,
a public gathering (at the cinema or movie
theatre), a political opportunity, a mode of
governanceand an economic activity. The
boundaries of film now blur into television,
video,musicand amusement park culture.
Much film analysis focuses on the film
itself – for example, the narrative structure,
the sets, camera shots and editing – and it
can be a means of studying how dominant
social and geopolitical understandings and
anxieties are expressed, produced, transmitted
and resisted. US noir films of the 1940s and
1950s, for instance, have been interpreted as
expressions of geopolitical and social anxieties:
about nuclearwar, themigrationof southern
African-Americans to northern cities, and
relations between women and men. The geog-
raphies scripted into noir films (e.g. the dark
and foreboding city) express and fuel these
anxieties (Farish, 2005). Alternatively, as a

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_F Final Proof page 252 31.3.2009 1:20pm

FILM

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