Research Methods in Anthropology is the standard textbook for methods classes in anthropology programs. Over the past dozen years, it has launched tens of thousands of students into the field with its combination of rigorous methodology, wry humor, commonsense advice, and numerous examples from actual field projects. Now the fourth edition of this classic textbook is ready, written in Russ Bernard's unmistakable conversational style. It contains all the useful methodological advice of previous editions and more: additional material on text analysis, an expanded section on sampling in field settings, the use of computers for fieldwork and analysis, the pros and cons of rapid assessment techniques in anthropology, dozens of new examples, and an expanded bibliography. 'Methods belong to all of us' is the watchphrase of this book. Whether you are coming from a scientific, interpretive, or applied anthropological tradition, your students should learn field methods from the best guide around.
"Be brave in your hypotheses," Dr. Bernard told us this week. Written in a conversational, straightforward style, this is the book on anthropological methods. Post-structuralists -- beware the storm of ANTHROPOLOGICAL SCIENCE.
You've heard of "the bible" - but have you read Bernard's Research Methods? Because, if not, you're missing out on a book that's far more informative, well thought out, approachable, and dependable.
Sure, the opening line of this review might be in jest... actually, no. I teach methods classes in academic and professional settings; review several new methods textbooks each year; and am generally obsessed with trying to improve the methodological rigour of our field. Bernard's Research Methods is, without question, the best book of its kind. It is a comprehensive, well-written, and accurate introduction to a wide range of research methods, both qualitative and quantitative.
Are there things I'd change? Sure. The statistical chapters at the end could use a little more room to breathe, allowing Bernard's smooth way of explaining things to demystify a little more (he does so well on the first half dozen statistical parameters, but we lose this accessibility as the chapter progresses). There are a few places where things are a little dated (e.g., use of computers and digital data) and could use a quick refresher.
But, in terms of being the definitive, absolute go-to methodological source for the vast majority of methods you'll encounter in conducting anthropological research? This is it. Start here, then augment with other classic (e.g., Krippendorff's 'Content Analysis') and important recent (Jensen's 'Doing Real Research' and Gough et al.'s 'Introduction to Systematic Reviews') texts.
But, there is very good reason this is the field's foundational methods text, used by colleagues I respect. Start here.
For the thickness and the topic this author is amazingly un-dry! Plenty of examples and lively side comments to stir it up. It's rare to find a text book that is enjoyable to read.
Unquestionably the single best authority on anthropological research methods. Every anthropologist should read this book. And when they are done they should set it at the bottom of their "to read" pile and read it again.
I would recommend this book to college students who want to understand the world around them with a systematic method. I learned a lot from this to design my research at my company. I learned how to interview people, how to design a survey, and many things more.
This is the book that taught me how to think like an Anthropologist. It is essential for anyone looking to develop products that fulfill a consumer's need, or anyone looking to write an ethnography about anything.
This book teaches how to collect, organize and annotate anthropological data, as well as what to look for when doing observational analysis.
One of the best things about this book is that it teaches readers how to implement ethics into their research. It shows how to befriend and respect the groups that form the basis for the reader's research, and shows how to successfully and honestly conduct participant observation.
This book is a great companion to any record of ethnography. If you read this book hand-in-hand with a piece of anthropological analysis, the failures and successes of the anthropologist will become clear. This method is an excellent way of learning from others successful and unsuccessful research methods.
Feel free to contact me at hello@oakhazelnut.com if you'd like a few .pdf ethnographies to study with this book.
It's considered a classic- if you want an NSF, NEH, Fulbright, etc. grant, you'd better cite it. The chapters on fieldwork (particularly fieldnotes, interviews, and p-o) are fantastic starting points for people wanting to understand how to do anthropological fieldwork.
My opinion though- it's outdated, unadventurous, and not going to give you much if your study is much more qualitatively based. The version of anthropology it supports is less a critical interrogation of the world around us, as much as it is an idealistic direction towards anthropology as a 'social' science. Alas, this is only my opinion, which is always capable of changing :)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Research Methods in Anthropology supposes that you already have background knowledge in statistics. Bernard supposes that the reader understands complex methods in statistics, and makes no effort to explain the himself. I found myself having to look up definitions and processes constantly. Maybe it is my fault for not have taken statistics, but as THE book for anthropological data I feel as if it could have been a bit more in depth.
Picked to represent a course I took at CU called "The Qualitative Method in Anthropological Thought" taught by Dave Green, the then Department Chair. Statistics... Date is approximate.
This is sort of the bible of anthropologists of the last generation. I'm sure others have come and replaced its supremecy, but to many of us, it was well thumbed.