Balša Lubarda
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On the incompleteness of ethnography
Embracing and navigating failure as a principle in research on the far right
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The concept of ‘failure’, established in critical (social) anthropology, stands for an incessant critique of moral relativism characteristic of ethnographic research. Embodied in the practice of reflexivity and positioned advocating, failure brings about an ‘incomplete ethnography’. Building on four years of ethnographic research and more than seventy qualitative interviews conducted with far-right representatives in six countries, this chapter seeks to unpack the notion of incomplete ethnography, serving two main purposes. First is to contribute to the broader and still ongoing debate on policing the scholarly boundaries of ethnography as a method, that is, the differences with respect to its application in sociology, anthropology and political science. Second is to reflect on the theoretical and practical use of the notions of ‘failure’ and ‘incompleteness; in producing knowledge about the far right. Ethnographies are incomplete when ethnographers fail. Some of these failures include frequently changing research locations amid security concerns, the ethics of care in conveying the research aims to our interlocutors and audiences, the inability to establish a rapport, the role of informality, the perils of romanticising or exaggerating the ideological danger, or failure to sufficiently account for field relationships in theorising. In spite of being a constitutive part of virtually any ethnographic experience, hence not exclusively bound to far right research, failure in the field and the ‘incomplete ethnography’ remain subject to the rigorous standards characteristic of any (other) research undertaking.

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The ethics of researching the far right

Critical approaches and reflections

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