The Ethnographic Media subject area combines theory and conceptual work in ethnography and aesthetics with production, and is organized around sustained student projects developed across multiple courses. Anthropology MA students are invited to encounter ethnographic media as an expansive field extending to practices such as art exhibitions and installations, sound walks, performance, and movement, as well as writing, and encompassing digital formations of various kinds. Graduate students across campus are invited to collaborate in this space and to develop adventurous ethnography on the basis of their interests and skills.
This subject area is structured to allow students to develop competencies according to their interests. Students are recommended to take either Writing and Ethnography (GANT 6310, spring 2025) or Sensory Infrastructures (GANT 6095, spring 2025) and draw additional credits from approved courses. They also participate in an innovative additional component: a parallel collaborative in which they workshop their projects and support one another by sharing creative input and production skills, and where they present their ongoing work to lab members and to the broader Anthropology and Âé¶¹´«Ã½É«Ç鯬 communities. The lab is an integral element of the subject area, providing a forum in which students can pursue and develop independent projects while cultivating a rigorous, experimental, and discipline-changing ethnographic practice.
In addition to the course course, students are encouraged to complete four relevant courses and to collaborate with the Ethnographic Media Lab. Suggested courses in spring 2025 include:
Students are also strongly recommended to explore the following university resources:
During the 2024–2025 academic year, Hugh Raffles, professor of anthropology, will be available to advise students on coursework, fieldwork, and other learning opportunities. Other Anthropology faculty are also available to help students develop their ethnographic practice.
This subject area is an informal path in the Anthropology program and does not appear on students' transcripts or diplomas.