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Multisited ethnography has primarily been portrayed as a challenge for the following field-worker, with the researcher taking the central role and neglecting research participants also experiencing a multisited nature of their work. The authors argue that literature on multisited ethnography merely discusses multisitedness as a methodological theme. In correspondence, the authors propose to think of multisitedness not just as a methodological theme but also as an empirical theme.
To show the fruitfulness of discussing multisitedness using the complementary etic and emic analysis, the authors present the example of Mennonite entrepreneurial activities in Belize, a heterogeneous group of migrants that established themselves as successful traders and entrepreneurs. Through an etic multisited ethnographic perspective, the authors compare and contrast four communities of Mennonites in terms of their entrepreneurial activities, technology and energy use. Through an emic perspective, the authors demonstrate how Mennonites, while preferring an in-group focus, navigate their multisited entrepreneurial activities, which require interaction with the outside world.
The authors highlight the value of combining etic—emic reflections to acknowledge and include the multisited nature of many social phenomena as experienced by the research participants. Becker, B. Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this article for both commercial and non-commercial purposes , subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors.
Multisited ethnography has turned into a well-established methodological framework that offers flexibility, malleability and contingency to ethnographers to follow the topic of inquiry or research participants of interest Falzon, With mode, in this context, we refer to the path one follows doing fieldwork, either through deliberate choices to follow specific agents while navigating various spaces or places of interest or through more opportunistic, unconscious attempts to follow subjects of inquiry Van Duijn, Another more rural-orientated example is the project by Archetti who used multisited ethnography in Ecuador to compare and contrast various indigenous communities in the Andes in their approach to modernizing guinea pig production and why this failed as the various communities shared a traditional way of keeping and breeding guinea pigs in their homes.