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Tethered Venues: Discerning Distant Influences on a Field Site

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  • Daniel A. Menchik

Abstract

Ethnographers often study those who periodically meet to interact in multiple venues. This article focuses on how people who share and engage in tasks in recurrently visited venues define and change their social projects’ problems and solutions. To address the complexities of this “meta-work,†I introduce the concept of “tethers.†Tethers are links across venues that people use to set and shift these problems and solutions that are continuously being contested. Drawing on examples from the author’s fieldwork and other ethnographic accounts of professional work, I examine three types of tethers: focal participants, things, and language. Paying attention to tethers also results in practical implications for managing subjects’ use of the ethnographer as a tether, making decisions about what venues to observe, and developing strategies for focusing one’s observations when in those venues. I argue that a focus on subjects’ use of tethers across venues helps mitigate the challenges ethnographers face when accounting for the influence of temporally and geographically distant sites of recurrent interaction.

Suggested Citation

  • Daniel A. Menchik, 2019. "Tethered Venues: Discerning Distant Influences on a Field Site," Sociological Methods & Research, , vol. 48(4), pages 850-876, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:somere:v:48:y:2019:i:4:p:850-876
    DOI: 10.1177/0049124117729695
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Wilson, Nicky & Pope, Catherine & Roberts, Lisa & Crouch, Robert, 2014. "Governing healthcare: Finding meaning in a clinical practice guideline for the management of non-specific low back pain," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 102(C), pages 138-145.
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    Cited by:

    1. Iddo Tavory, 2019. "Beyond the Calculus of Power and Position: Relationships and Theorizing in Ethnography," Sociological Methods & Research, , vol. 48(4), pages 727-738, November.
    2. Menchik, Daniel A. & Giaquinta, Maya, 2024. "The words we die by," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 340(C).

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