Publication | Closed Access
Meaning not measurement
150
Citations
27
References
2010
Year
History Of EthnographySocial ResearchMeasurement TheoryMeasurementRepresentation StudiesParticipant ObservationEducationFindings EthnographyPopular CultureCultural StudiesJournalismSystem MeasurementEthnographic ResearchQualitative InterpretationEvent ManagementCalibrationEvents ResearchInstrumentationSports StudiesSocial DynamicsCultureEvent EvaluationMeasurement ModelsMusic FestivalsEthnographyPurpose Events ResearchArtsCultural AnthropologyMeasurement System
Events research is increasingly embracing experience‑related studies, challenging the dominance of positivist, quantitative approaches. This paper seeks to shift the paradigm toward a balanced examination of events by promoting ethnography as a valuable research approach. The authors surveyed event‑related publications, reviewed qualitative and ethnographic literature, and argued for observation, interviewing, and documentary methods as suitable for studying consumer experience of events and festivals. Ethnography is presented as an appropriate, versatile approach that equips researchers with practical tools, promises to diversify the literature, and rebalances the field’s quantitative dominance, thereby contributing original knowledge to events and festivals.
Purpose Events research is witnessing a gradual increase in experience‐related studies, reflecting a challenge to the dominance of positivist, quantitative‐based studies. This purpose of this paper is to support a paradigm shift to effect a more balanced examination of events within the existing body of literature. Design/methodology/approach A search of events‐related publications in both events and non‐events journals is conducted in order to identify the level of use of the ethnographic approach by researchers in event studies. The literature on qualitative methods and on ethnography in particular is also examined, in a bid to show how ethnography can be used and how it is specifically suited to inquiry into the consumer experience of events and festivals. Findings Ethnography is advocated as an appropriate research approach to the events field, and this paper details the extensive potential that this approach offers. Drawing from the wider literature on ethnography, a rationale for an alternative methodology with the associated research methods of observation, interviewing and the use of documentary sources is explored and its applicability to events research is demonstrated. Practical implications The academic researcher is introduced to the potential offered by ethnography and is pointed in the direction of the relevant research methods literature that would equip them with the practical tools of investigation. Originality/value By alerting the reader to the applicability and value of ethnography, this paper aims to encourage the adoption of the ethnographic approach by event researchers. This will thereby lead to a more diverse literature on events, and will rebalance the current dominance of quantitative‐based research papers, and it is for this reason that this paper makes an original contribution to knowledge in the study of events and festivals.
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