Repository logo
Home
Communities & Collections
All of NBU-IR
Log In
New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. Browse by Subject

Browsing by Subject "embeddedness"

Filter results by typing the first few letters
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
  • Results Per Page
  • Sort Options
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Empathy and Embeddedness in Social Science Research: The Contrasting Methods of Malinowski and Elwin
    (University of North Bengal, 31-03-2021) Roy, Sinjini
    Empirical, field-based research in Social Sciences, are neither bereft of empathy (the will to do good to and feel for others) and embeddedness (involving oneself with the process of transformation, while, at the same time, drawing consciousness about it) nor are they obstacles in the way to draw an understanding about social reality. This is the social science tradition that we inherit from Marx and the post-Marxists (the scholars of German Critical School, Gramsci, Althusser and so on), Levi-Strauss, C. Wright Mills, and the feminists starting Simone de Beauvior to Julia Kristeva or Judith Butler. The phenomenologists like Edmund Husserl and Alfred Schutz have taught us how empathy for others’ subjective experiences and cognition is the central component of the reflexive method through which the subjective knowledge can be transcended into intersubjective (hence universal) knowledge. This is in the space of the humanist social science tradition which does not conform to the “scientific” nonnormative methodological tradition popularized by Comte, Durkheim or Weber. In this paper I have discussed about the essences of the “scientific” (read objective) and the empathetic methodological traditions of two noted anthropologists, Bronislaw Malinowski and Verrier Elwin, which represent two contrasting methods (although one cannot claim that Malinowski never expressed empathy for the native people he studied), and find out if one could strike a balance between the two traditions while highlighting the significance of empathy and embeddedness in field-based research.
NBU-IR

The NBU Institutional Repository is managed by University Library, University of North Bengal. For any related queries feel free to contact with us at anytime.

Useful Links

  • Home
  • Cookie settings
  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement
  • Send Feedback

Our Services

  • University Library
  • NBU
  • Shodhganga
  • Plagiarism Check
  • DrillBit-Extrim

Contact Us

University Library
University of North Bengal
Raja Rammohunpur
PO-NBU, Dist-Darjeeling, PIN-734013
West Bengal, India.

Email: ir-help@nbu.ac.in

University Library, NBU copyright © 2002-2025