Moments of ritual reveal symbolic meanings, reinforce boundaries of the social group, and tie actors to one another. Because rituals are so important to social life, ethnographers must be attuned to both institutionalized and everyday rituals of their sites. However, methodological literature rarely discusses how everyday rituals should be treated during data collection, analysis, or presentation. We use data from two ethnographic sites—a yoga studio and training for health care volunteers—to illustrate the challenges of observing others during rituals and making sense of our own experiences of rituals, especially given varying levels of participation and resistance to rituals. We argue that greater reflexivity, especially of embodied experiences, is needed when studying everyday rituals and provide methodological recommendations for improving ethnographic study.
CITATION STYLE
Cain, C. L., & Scrivner, B. (2022). Everyday Ritual and Ethnographic Practice: Two Cases Showing the Importance of Embodiment and Reflexivity. Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 51(4), 490–515. https://doi.org/10.1177/08912416211060663
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