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- Title
Canine Connections: Fieldwork with a Dog as Research Assistant.
- Authors
Lane, Karen
- Abstract
My research seeks out muted narratives that struggle to be heard in the contested city of Belfast. My dog is one of my ethnographic methods: dog-walking is rarely a direct journey from A to B and she can 'authenticate' my lingering presence in unfamiliar places; she is a gateway to dog-focused communal activities; and her categorisation of people is based on smell, not politics, religion or country of origin. When encountering random strangers with an attractive and friendly dog, her role is obvious: introduction enacted, anthropologist takes over. But does she simply mediate the encounter or does she shape what happens? The relationship between dog and person is reciprocal and the extent to which each actor responds to the other prolongs and moulds the encounter. Can she elicit stories that may not otherwise be told, do more than 'only connect'? This article draws on actor-network theory and cosmopolitanism.
- Subjects
ETHNOLOGY methodology; HUMAN-animal communication; COSMOPOLITANISM
- Publication
Anthropology in Action, 2015, Vol 22, Issue 3, p27
- ISSN
0967-201X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3167/aia.2015.220304