Documents found

  1. 581.

    Article published in XYZ. La revue de la nouvelle (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 81, 2005

    Digital publication year: 2010

  2. 582.

    Article published in XYZ. La revue de la nouvelle (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 66, 2001

    Digital publication year: 2010

  3. 583.

    Foz, Clara and Lafarga, Francisco

    Présentation

    Other published in TTR : traduction, terminologie, rédaction (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 18, Issue 1, 2005

    Digital publication year: 2006

  4. 584.

    Article published in Tangence (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 59, 1999

    Digital publication year: 2004

  5. 585.

    Article published in Voix et Images (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 12, Issue 2, 1987

    Digital publication year: 2006

  6. 586.

    Article published in Voix et Images (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 7, Issue 2, 1982

    Digital publication year: 2006

  7. 587.

    Other published in Voix et Images (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 28, Issue 1, 2002

    Digital publication year: 2003

  8. 588.

    Chanonat, Michelle, Cadieux, Alexandre, Brien-Legault, Ariane and Claude, Nathalie

    Mises en bouche

    Article published in Jeu (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 159, 2016

    Digital publication year: 2016

  9. 589.

    Article published in ETC MEDIA (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 102, 2014

    Digital publication year: 2014

  10. 590.

    Article published in Eurostudia (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 10, Issue 1, 2015

    Digital publication year: 2015

    More information

    Katherine Verdery's latest book, an ethnography of the Archive of Romania's Secret Police and the permission to copy and study a Securitate file, that of Iuliana, represents, for the author, the opportunity to write an unusual book review. Superposing the book and the file allows her to reflect on the work of secret police officers and that of ethnographers as well as questioning the practice of the sociological observer. As it turns out, the file adds a new dimension and an interpretation key to the book: beyond the importance of networks or social relationships as material secret police officers and ethnographers share, it discloses gossip as an empirical source and a recruitment technique. Centering on gossip helps the author in reformulating one of the book's central arguments and delineating the contours of the “bourgeois,” a figure at the core of a new research project. The extreme character of the two cases at hand—material constituted toward a political end—sheds light on the relations ethnographers entertain to their informants as well as to dilemmas of research, which might otherwise remain unseen.