I was excited to see a new journal of autoethnography in the works and it’s finally here! Even more exciting is that this essay I started working on the first time I taught my seminar in Literary Ethnography is finally out in the world.
Through my own narrative about my relationship with my fictive father in Zanzibar and the impact of this relationship on my research, in this autoethnographic essay I explore three themes: fictiveness, fatherhood, and the field. These themes tie together different aspects of the term “patriography,” linking them to ethnography and its subgenre autoethnography. Drawing on the term “patriography” as the science or study of fathers, I use the concept of “the field” to examine the impact of narratives about fathers on not only the field as a site of ethnographic research but also on the field of African cultural studies.
Published on August 06, 2020 10:52