Maria Noun Since it was my first time writing an ethnography, I thought it was best that once I had chosen my research site, I go into the field with a concrete research topic on my mind. I knew that my lack of experience would mean that I was likely to start off my observations … Continue reading
Category Archives: Craft 2025
Feeling at Home: An Ethnography of UTIRAN
Michael Saleki My case study for ANT380 focused on the Iranian Student Association at the University of Toronto, informally referred to as UTIRAN. My reasoning for selecting UTIRAN for my case study was not fundamentally tied to the organization itself, but rather, holistically speaking, stimulated by an aim to empirically demonstrate how co-ethnic community organizations … Continue reading
Living with the Cultural Revolution: An Ethnographic Reflection
Weiwei Li One of the most challenging aspects of this fieldwork was recognizing how strongly my initial research question shaped what I expected to find. I entered the project with a clear interest in how Chinese Gen Z encounter censored or fragmented histories, but I also carried an assumption: that exposure to suppressed information would … Continue reading
Lessons From my First Ethnography
Raine-Liette Blanchard Quick Sketch of Silent Space (the sound of a/c in the room reminded me of the river back home) Stashed away on the fourteenth floor of the University of Toronto’s most popular library; down confusing hallways, with uninviting concrete floors and cement walls, lies the East Asian Studies department. This was the location … Continue reading
Creating with and Towards a Mess: A Reflection
Ryn Van Leeuwen The research questions that drove this ethnographic project were varied and numerous. I began with an interest in the Women, Trans and Nonbinary hours at Bikechain (a DIY bike repair teaching space on the edge of campus) yet soon realized that gender was not as important as I had expected. I then … Continue reading
The Friends We Made Along the Way: An Ethnographic Poem
Annabelle Chin Tomorrow, it will be over Words lost to time Our months will lay abandoned But the days they will be mine I joined for fleeting moments For the laughter through the pain The treasure was not glory But the friends we made along the way This is a poem I wrote to describe … Continue reading
Women in Campus and Community Radio
Amelia Spong When I walk through the doors after being buzzed in, the station unfolds in front of me along one 100-foot-long hallway. Along the right side are my colleagues’ offices. Jacob and Dina share the big one, while Michelle gets her own mid-sized, although cluttered, space. To my left, a file cabinet stretches 9 … Continue reading
Desire and Sociality in a Toronto Sex Club
Jaelin Caverhill It is a bit of a weird experience, and continues to be, at least for me, to make eye contact with someone’s dick before them, but at Haven, nude bodies, explicit displays of sexuality, and undercurrents of desire are the norm. Porn plays on screens in almost every room, and it is not … Continue reading
Excerpts from Bibliosimia: Exploring Doug Miller Books
Daniel Cross As you enter the bookstore, the sounds of the Bloor Street traffic fade away, replaced by the thick quiet of soft creaking footsteps and rustling pages. Its small interior is made even smaller by the stacks of books and boxes sitting in front of the huge shelves, leaving just enough space in the … Continue reading
A conversation on the ethnography of protest
Nida Islam We sat in the private library room chatting after completing our interview. There was an ease to the conversation, despite it being the first time we had met. We ended up speaking for over 3 hours. Perhaps it had something to do with the unspoken bond hijabis share, the one that prompts us … Continue reading