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INSECTOPEDIA

I was most interested in the sketch's description of the structure of the ethnography. As Raymond mentioned, the A-Z Insectpedia structure "mocks the ieda that there can be any complete account of A-Z human insect relations." The ethnography documents several stories from people around the world interacting with insects. 

Raffles, Hugh: Insectopedia

This sketch gives me a clear idea of what this ethnography is about such as who are the main actors and notes that positionality is not addressed. I would like to know what an example of what the text had to say that was not so obvious. This sketch proposed that this ethnography could be a museum exhibit or educational activity for young children.

Raffles: Insectopedia

The text is set up as an A-Z compendium of human-insect relations. The chapter lengths vary, from just a few pages to over a dozen. The text does ask for other ways of reading. It does not have to be read sequentially, but can be read in any order. The layout performs an argument that it is impossible to capture the depth and breadth of human-insect relations in a modernist form like the encyclopedia, as the A-Z structure breaks down the further into the alphabet that you go.