Sunday, January 23, 2011

Why Ethnography, Julian Orr?

Why does Julian Orr decide use ethnography to answer his question about the role of work practice in technician-industry relations and technician identity? In Orr’s Talking about Machines: An Ethnography of a Modern Job (1996), we see an example of ethnography from social anthropology. Clearly, “Orr chose ethnography because he is an anthropologist” is not a sufficient answer. Students seeking the implications of research questions and philosophical-methodological approaches for appropriate research methods deserve a more in-depth response.

(1) I would like to uncover the origins of Orr’s decision to use ethnography. I say uncover, because at no point is Orr explicit about this decision.

(2) Orr’s narrative only offers implicit justification for ethnography, so I propose additional justifications as an exercise in deciding to pursue ethnography.

Orr comes at his study through the literature on changing modes of production and the “problematic” (152) impact on workers. He agrees with the intent of the literature on how relations between workers, corporations and the production system relate to changing worker identities. Alienation of workers has profound social affects, most importantly on worker identities. As workers become “de-skilled” (150), “occupational communities” (151) of workers become more important. However, Orr attests that many related studies ignore an important component, the idea that “work practice” can also impact worker identity. Informed by his own work as a technician, he observes the lives of copy machine service technicians as a participant. Short of justifying his decision to conduct ethnography, Orr “considers” the day-to-day of industrial technicians to be a “rewarding subject for ethnographies of work” (152).

Luckily, Orr’s findings support the research that he was trying to build on. However, although ethnography is a reward in and of itself, there are other factors implicitly driving Orr’s methodological choice. After reading John Searle’s Constructing Social Reality (1995), I cannot help but note the layers of contextual meaning hidden in the technicians’ work lives. Four key words from his study offer clues—practice, control, stories, and identity. For example, to understand a practice it must be observed. My telling you what my work entails is different than you observing my work and interpreting it based on your research criteria. Second, Orr’s technicians had limited control over their environment. How the technicians negotiated externally imposed reality, such as the corporation’s service documentation, requires adaptation, resistance or blind acceptance, depending on the context. Third, through their war stories the technician’s created both community as well as an undocumented pool of knowledge as a foundation for their skill development. Finally, since part of Orr’s research goal was to understand technician identity, it makes sense to observe the technicians in context (the C in Searle’s “X counts as Y in C”).

For these reasons ethnography is an appropriate method for Orr’s study of relationships and identity; it gives contextual answers, allows patterns of work practice to emerge from technician behavior over time, and exposes the researcher to internally created realities (stories) and external realities (customers/corporation/machines) to give a holistic picture.

Disclaimer: The trick with reverse-engineering an argument for the use of a method after the research is finished is that it is difficult to know how much one is influenced by the research findings. Nevertheless, I hope this process is useful in getting us to think about the amount of (worthwhile) effort needed to design a study based on solid methodological foundations.

Labels: , ,

4 Comments:

Blogger Eddy said...

While I agree with Caroline that ethnography may have been the most appropriate research method for Orr's study, I also have some serious reservations about the overall value ethnographic studies of this kind. In Talking About Machines Orr gave the impression that all the technicians were model employees; all seemed highly dedicated to their employer, as well as their clients. Reading this made me think back to the people I have worked with in my previous jobs (particularly in the navy). While some fellow officers were as highly dedicated to their vocations as these technicians, a great deal were not. While I was able to gain this perspective by spending ten years in the service, I wonder what impression an ethnographer studying naval offices for a period of weeks or even months would get? Knowing that their activities were being recorded and disseminated to a wide audience (including the admiral) would my colleagues have behaved as they usually did? How much time would be spent reading the paper/doing the crossword/checking one's hockey pool each morning instead of working? Would afternoon naps in the cabins (aka. “nooners”) have continued undisturbed? How much time would have been spent complaining that the senior officers were [insert colourful language here] idiots? These activities took up a large portion of the “working” day (at least when not at sea).
I cannot speak specifically to Orr and Xerox technicians, but I highly suspect that any ethnographic study of sailors by an outsider would be highly inauthentic and therefore mostly useless.
This example speaks to the larger point that by the simply act of observing a subject we are exerting influence over it (I believe that this may be related to Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principal but I'm not entirely sure). The more the observer interacts with her subject, the more she influences its behaviour. In Orr's case, the high level of interaction with his subjects leads me to question the authenticity of the behaviour he recorded. Is Orr really studying how Xerox technicians act? Or is he studying how they act when in the presence of an ethnographer?

6:15 PM  
Blogger adabunny said...

I agree with Eddy. Orr's inevitable 'participation' in his research must color both his observations and what he is observing. While I don't think this is necessarily a bad thing (since all human interaction is part performance), presenting his study as illustrative of general xerox machine repair people practice seems problematic.
Also, I found him a bit contradictory (though this could be my misunderstanding...). He talks about how part of the value of the work itself is in its social dimensions -- how the technicians take part in informal group discussions of problem machines to further both their collective and individual 'battles' against the machines/customers. Yet, doesn't he also say that this particular subgroup he is following is ABNORMAL or UNIQUE in that they are closer than the other subgroups and socialize/share responsibility much more than others? If that is the case, how can communication/community be considered such a fundamental part of technicians in general?

8:41 PM  
Anonymous Ela said...

It seems that the heart of the issue is what impact the participant-observer has on the group, which is different according to whether the ethnographer is an "insider" or an "outsider." Some would say that an outside observer's "critical distance" is an asset because such an observer can articulate things that the observed cannot. However, as Eddy points out, the ethnographer's outsider status is likely to change the behavior of the group . . . in pretty fundamental ways that ultimately threaten the whole project. On the other hand, the observed might behave more naturally around an "insider" who keeps his ethnographic project a secret from the group, much like a spy. But one could say that such an emic perspective lacks critical distance and that not identifying yourself as an ethnographer who is recording observations is unethical.

I will add to this another dilemma. For myself, I would have a hard time writing about people with whom I form relationships, because I would feel like it is a breech of the relationship. Why should I cast my peers as specimens? On the other hand, if I remain outside of a group, how can I pretend to know them?

6:19 PM  
Blogger Efe Sevin said...

Ela's concern is noteworthy, though as the participants are informed, it is an emotional/personal, rather than an ethical issue.
As we are listing the distance problem, I'd like to continue the thread. I listened to a presentation where a research team was conducting an inquiry about homosexual teens' communication in online chat rooms. IRB required the researcher to repost a warning about his identity every 15 minutes. Therefore, the participants were always aware of the 'outsider'.
The researcher discussed a couple of instances where the participants intentionally changed the topic of conversation (i.e. someone saying, hey the researcher is with us, let's talk about this). However, overall he was quite comfortable about participants' natural behavior.
Long story short, participants tend to forget about the researcher - stop caring. I believe it is possible to observe regular behavioral patterns through ethnography.

4:31 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home