Ethnographic studies are usually holistic as it is founded on the idea that humans are best understood in the fullest possible context, including: the place where they live, the improvements they've made to that place, how they are making a living and providing food, housing, energy and water for themselves, what their marriage customs are, what language(s) they speak and so on. Ethnography has connections to genres as diverse as travel writing, colonial office reports, the play and the novel.[5] Many cultural anthropologists consider ethnography the essence of the discipline.[6] It would be a rare program in graduate cultural anthropology that didn't require an ethnography as part of the doctoral process.
Evaluating ethnography
Ethnographic methodology is not usually evaluated in terms of philosophical standpoint (such as positivism and emotionalism). Ethnographic studies nonetheless need to be evaluated in some manner. While there is no consensus on evaluation standards, Richardson (2000, p. 254)[8] provides 5 criteria that ethnographers might find helpful.
Substantive Contribution: "Does the piece contribute to our understanding of social-life?"
Aesthetic Merit: "Does this piece succeed aesthetically?"
Reflexivity: "How did the author come to write this text…Is there adequate self-awareness and self-exposure for the reader to make judgments about the point of view?"
Impact: "Does this affect me? Emotionally? Intellectually?" Does it move me?
Expresses a Reality: "Does it seem 'true'—a credible account of a cultural, social, individual, or communal sense of the 'real'?"