I think the fieldwork of information research can take
place anywhere. For Hartel, her fieldwork was in people’s houses, specifically
their kitchens and areas of culinary research. For Park, he believed it could
be at the orchestra hall, or the doorsteps of someone’s house. For one of my
former professors, who is partially a real life Indiana Jones, his fieldwork of
information research took place in archaeological sites on Mauritius studying
the colonial history of the Atlantic. (I will be more than happy to speak to
anyone about his research and level of cool).
For me, my fieldwork of information research is my desk
studying secondary resources on Lollard history. I am very limited in my
fieldwork, which challenges the notions put forward by Hartel and Park. A
researcher can be very interested in a topic, and wants to conduct the most
thorough research they can in order to have the information they need. Yet
their access to the fieldwork they need to conduct is limited geographically,
financially, current resources. As a historian, my field of research is the
library, archives, and sometimes archaeological site; though I am more focussed
on textual documents than artefacts. And yet, because of my research topic, I
cannot visit the archives and libraries to gather information from the primary
sources. I rely on the portrayal and interpretation of these documents by
secondary sources.
I think my research topic conveys the challenges of
fieldwork, but also how the researcher alters their field in order to conduct
the research they want. For example, my former professor wanted to study a
specific topic and found that his fieldwork included archaeological research to
uncover information. He also has means of accessibility to these sites. As
well, Hartel was able to interact with individuals in the group she was
studying. However, I unfortunately cannot travel to the UK and visit the
Bodleian Library to look at 15th century manuscripts, or interact
with the individuals who wrote or are mentioned in the texts. Therefore, I
altered my fieldwork to accommodate my research. I believe information research
allows us to rethink notions of the field beyond sociological or archaeological
fields as information research can be conducted on a number of topics where
access to these two types of fields is not possible or needed.
You have a former professor who is partially a real life Indiana Jones -- you win. :)
ReplyDeleteStephanie A
I think you and I are both facing the constraint of a field with rather high barriers to access if we wanted to get our hands dirty in our research.
ReplyDeleteAs great as fieldwork might be, in all its different forms, it is definitely worth remembering that there are issues of access within academia too and that access to a field and to resources is not a guaranteed or simple thing.
Similar to what you're doing, I am also looking to take elements of my artifacts and my field and bring them within reach.
I suppose that we are left with something similar to what Professor Galey said in that our element of surprise is more likely to come from the books and texts that we work with instead of social observations.