Introduction: Fieldwork, Text, and Audience - CAROLINE B. BRETTELL // Part I. Contested Texts: Implications for Fieldwork and Rapport // 1. Unintended Consequences: The Myth of "The Return! in Anthropological Fieldwork - DONA L. DAVIS // 2. Responding to the Anthropologist: When the Spiritual Baptists of Trinidad Read What I Write about Them - STEPHEN D. GLAZIER // Part II. Politicized Texts: Insider, Outsider, and Ethnographic Authority // 3. Involvement, Detachment, and Representation on Corsica - ALEXANDRA JAFFE // 4. Fieldwork in Quebec, Scholarly Reviews, and Anthropological Dialogues - RICHARD HANDLER // 5. The Student of Culture and the Ethnography of Irish Intellectuals - ELIZABETH A. SHEEHAN // Part III. Mediated Texts: Issues of Representation and Identity // 6. Whose History Is It? Selection and Representation in the Creation of a Text - CAROLINE B. BRETTELL // 7. When They Read What the Papers Say We Wrote - OFRA GREENBERG // Part IV. Collaborative Texts: Ethics, Negotiation, and Compromise // 8. Is Anonymity Possible? Writing about Refugees in the United States - MARYCAROL HOPKINS // 9. Just Stories of Ethnographic Authority - RICHARD P. HORWITZ // 10. Myths of Objectivity and the Collaborative Process in Life History Research - SALLY MCBETH // 11. The Case of Mistaken Identity: Problems in Representing Women on the Right - FAYE GINSBURG // Bibliography // Index // About the Editor and Contributors