Anthropologists have recently become inspired, captivated even, by the practices of the arts, design, and architecture in efforts to renew anthropology’s modes of engagement and understandings of its relevance, particularly affecting how we approach ethnographic fieldwork. Having each worked for well over a decade at these crossroads, the authors reflect on a search for anthropological relevance undertaken through collaborative materializations of the field, in situations where anthropologists go beyond gestures of cultural critique and participant observation. This entails creating hosting environments where our counterparts turn not just into co-ethnographers or co-thinkers, but also and mainly into ethnographic guests. The idea is familiar in a discipline rooted in forcing uninvited visits on hosts around the world. However, in our material explorations, we envision a different route. For us, hosting, as a mode of inquiry, provides openings to a more inviting anthropology, involving zones of mutual uncertainty among a multiplicity of actors so as to instil generative puzzlement without imposing our discipline on others. We conclude by making a plea for practising anthropology as a field of invitations in hopes of remaking worlds together with our ethnographic guests.
Criado, T.S., Martínez, F. & Berglund, E. (2026). For an Inviting Anthropology. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 32(1), 7-26
Francisco Martínez, Eeva Berglund