[15/15] © Eduardo González Santos / Éthnos
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Ethnology and Ethnography: Understanding Human Cultures

Éthnos · 25 Oct 2025 · No. 3 · objkey.com/1-3

Ethnology and ethnography are two interconnected disciplines within cultural anthropology that work together to document and understand the diversity of human societies. While they share common goals and often overlap in practice, each has its distinct focus and methodology.

Ethnography is the descriptive study of individual cultures through direct, immersive observation. Ethnographers engage in fieldwork—living among the people they study, often for extended periods ranging from months to years. This participant-observation approach allows researchers to experience daily life, social interactions, rituals, and cultural practices firsthand..

Ethnography is characterized by immersive research, where ethnographers embed themselves in communities, learning local languages and participating in everyday activities. The goal is holistic description, capturing the full complexity of a culture, including social structures, belief systems, economic practices, and symbolic meanings. Ethnographers strive to understand cultures from the emic perspective, grasping how people themselves interpret their world. The result is typically a rich, detailed account of a specific society—an ethnographic monograph. Classic ethnographies, such as Bronislaw Malinowski's work among the Trobriand Islanders or Margaret Mead's studies in Samoa, have provided invaluable windows into diverse ways of life..

Ethnology takes a step back from individual cultures to engage in comparative analysis. Ethnologists use ethnographic data from multiple societies to identify patterns, test hypotheses, and develop broader theories about human social and cultural behavior. The discipline employs the comparative method, systematically comparing cultures to understand similarities and differences. The focus is on theoretical analysis, explaining why cultural practices vary or remain constant across societies. Ethnologists work on pattern recognition, identifying universal features of human culture versus culturally-specific adaptations, and developing cross-cultural generalizations that apply beyond single cultures. For example, an ethnologist might compare kinship systems across dozens of societies to understand how different patterns of descent and marriage relate to economic systems or political organization..

Ethnography and ethnology exist in a complementary relationship. Ethnography provides the raw material—the detailed, contextualized data about specific cultures—that ethnology requires for comparative analysis. Without quality ethnography, ethnological comparisons would lack depth and accuracy. Conversely, ethnological insights help ethnographers know what questions to ask and what patterns to look for in their fieldwork. This relationship can be understood as ethnography focusing on the particular, describing individual cultures in detail, while ethnology focuses on the general, comparing cultures to understand broader human patterns.

Both disciplines—ethnology and photography—emerged in the 19th century but have evolved significantly. Early ethnographic photography often reflected colonial and ethnocentric assumptions, depicting non-Western peoples as static “types” within problematic evolutionary or racial frameworks. Over time, approaches shifted toward greater cultural sensitivity, recognizing the photographer’s role in framing subjects, the impact of power relations, and the need for consent and collaboration with the communities represented..

In the 20th century, ethnological photography began to move beyond documentation toward interpretation—seeking to capture lived experience, social context, and cultural meaning rather than mere appearance. Contemporary practitioners face new challenges and opportunities: representing complex and globalized identities, navigating ethical concerns about image ownership and circulation, and using digital and multimedia tools while honoring the dignity and agency of those photographed..

Today, photography informed by ethnological perspectives extends far beyond traditional anthropology. It influences curatorial practice, social research, and the ways we communicate cultural knowledge. The core insight endures—that to portray people truthfully, one must understand the worlds they inhabit and the meanings they create..

Together, ethnography and ethnology offer powerful tools for understanding human diversity while recognizing our shared humanity. They remind us that beneath surface differences lie both universal human experiences and the remarkable creativity with which different societies address fundamental questions of existence, meaning, and social organization.


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