2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-954x.2012.02092.x
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‘To Fill in the Missing Piece of the Middletown Puzzle’: Lessons from Re-Studying Middletown

Abstract: This paper revisits The Other Side of Middletown, a collaborative ethnography written by a group of faculty, students and African Americans living in Muncie, Indiana -the town made famous by Robert and Helen Lynd in their 1929 original study, Middletown, and its 1937 follow-up, Middletown in Transition. Our re-study (published in 2004 addressed the lack of African American history and experience in the Lynds' works and in the Middletown literature that has materialized since then. Employing a collaborative a… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…To this end, it was designed as a collaborative ethnography between Lassiter, his students, community leader Hurley Goodall, and other community members. It sought to practice an engaged social science, to set up dialogues, and to change the views of participants (at least some of whom reported changed views from participating in the study; Lassiter, 2012 ).…”
Section: Middletown and The Human Sciencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To this end, it was designed as a collaborative ethnography between Lassiter, his students, community leader Hurley Goodall, and other community members. It sought to practice an engaged social science, to set up dialogues, and to change the views of participants (at least some of whom reported changed views from participating in the study; Lassiter, 2012 ).…”
Section: Middletown and The Human Sciencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From a long list of research practices about which concerns have been raised, excluding particular groups of people from research is widely regarded as problematic because they are as a result denied a voice. For example, the exclusion of African-American residents of the city of Muncie, Indiana, by successive researchers was made all the more troubling by the success of publications about 'Middletown', yet it took many decades for this to be corrected (Lassiter 2012). Alongside non-representation stands the related problem of misrepresentation of research participants.…”
Section: The Danger Of Paying Insufficient Attention To Historymentioning
confidence: 99%