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      Trust Me, I am a Linguist! Building Partnership in the Field

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          Abstract

          Although language documentation calls for linguists, anthropologists, ethnomusicologists, and other scholars to work with each other, as well as with language communities, graduate students in linguistics often miss out on both parts of this enterprise: they have little opportunity to work on such teams and spend most of their fieldwork as “lone wolves.” In this paper, we reflect on our experiences as first-time fieldworkers and discuss how we managed to rid ourselves of the “lone wolf” label. We first discuss some of the challenges we faced in gaining the support of the communities we worked with. We then isolate the factors which facilitated our social integration and the benefits this had on our overall documentation projects.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          University of Hawai'i Press
          1934-5275
          2010
          Article
          10125/4465
          15029a84-dd1c-4727-ba3a-789043d00263

          Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike License

          Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike

          by-nc-d-sa

          History
          Page count
          pages: 12
          Funding
          National Foreign Language Resource Center

          language documentation,fieldwork,collaboration
          language documentation, fieldwork, collaboration

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