Bonus

According to AcademicInfluence.com, the most influential anthropologist today is… a Swede named Ulf Hannerz. Okay, sure, why not. For 10 points each:
[10e] Hannerz wrote a book on Exploring this type of area once neglected in favor of fieldwork in remote societies. Jane Jacobs wrote on The Death and Life of Great American ones.
ANSWER: cities [accept urban areas; accept Exploring the City: Inquiries Toward an Urban Anthropology; accept The Death and Life of Great American Cities]
[10h] In 2003 “reflections” on this type of ethnography, Hannerz describes using it to study foreign correspondents. George E. Marcus’s 1995 article on the “emergence” of this method ends by discussing the anthropologist as “circumstantial activist.”
ANSWER: multi-sited ethnography [or multilocal ethnography; accept “Being There . . . and There . . . and There! Reflections on Multi-Site Ethnography”; accept “The Emergence of Multi-Sited Ethnography”; accept any answer indicating ethnographic research or fieldwork in multiple places; prompt on answers that indicate following or tracking phenomena]
[10m] Hannerz’s wife, Helena Wulff, produced an ethnography of this art form “Across Borders.” Jane Jacobs likened interactions along the side of New York’s Hudson Street to this art form.
ANSWER: ballet [accept Ballet Across Borders: Career and Culture in the World of Dancers; accept sidewalk ballet; prompt on dance or choreography]
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