Abstract
This chapter discusses the origins and process of an ethnographic study in a single prison site. It reflects on the importance of dedicating time to the process, in part as a means of getting to know the prison as a human social system. It discusses the importance of granting participants moral complexity. Focussing on the matter of friendship, it outlines the way in which I developed my understanding of this aspect of prison life, both through the gradual accumulation of analytic insight and through direct experience. It comments on some of the customary anxieties expressed by prison ethnographers about the potentially exploitative nature of their relationships and concludes by highlighting the long-term benefits of ethnographic commitment.
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Notes
- 1.
Moments of bright illumination came more often after the fieldwork had ended, at the phases of analysis and writing. It was at this point—having established some distance from the kaleidoscopic confusion of the field—that I was really able to see.
- 2.
Here, I use the pseudonym that I gave him in The Prisoner Society. He has read and approved this chapter.
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Crewe, B. (2018). Process and Insight in Prison Ethnography. In: Rice, S., Maltz, M. (eds) Doing Ethnography in Criminology. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96316-7_8
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