Abstract
Serendipity, ‘the art of making an unsought finding’, is a much sought after scientific ideal. In anthropology, the epistemological weight placed on serendipity goes beyond mere sagacious discoveries because it is deemed to shape the ethnographic process. Dwelling on decades of de-construction of fieldwork as both a temporal and spatial unity, recent claims urge the discipline to shift from a quest for alternative social and cultural cosmologies to a journey that explores uncharted issues. This introduction lays out some of the new fieldwork conceptions and practices, which are analysed in depth by three ‘young scholars’ in the papers that follow.
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