Author
Listed:
- Larson Jonathan L.
(European Union Center, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 910 S. Fifth St., 329 Intl. Studies Bldg., Champaign, Illinois, USA)
Abstract
Framing the global in U.S. undergraduate education has significantly entailed “field” experiences. How have such activities prepared students to understand the interaction of daily life with larger institutions, structures, and processes? How to incorporate attention to the contradictions and untenable translations of a locale and its global entanglements into pedagogical responses to a pandemic that has significantly halted physical mobility and personal contact? This article takes up questions of how a certain conceptualization of ethnography could inform efforts to design new pedagogies for global studies. Building off a recent discussion in anthropology, I argue that the concept of ethnographic “sensibility” provides a productive entry point to discovering and articulating insights into the forms and dynamics of a population and place as shaped by interactions with other populations and places in time and space. I draw from my own experiences with the pre-pandemic piloting of an online course in media ethnography. I highlight examples of student work that point in one direction for how to engage students of global studies in profound field experiences, perhaps even when accessed digitally. This article employs the articulation of entry points for global research for the crafting of entry points for pedagogy.
Suggested Citation
Larson Jonathan L., 2020.
"Grasping Terroir while Teaching Online: Resituating the “Field” in Pedagogies of the Global,"
New Global Studies, De Gruyter, vol. 14(3), pages 263-286, December.
Handle:
RePEc:bpj:nglost:v:14:y:2020:i:3:p:263-286:n:7
DOI: 10.1515/ngs-2020-0042
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