Fascinating! The noken definition themes remind me of the ethnographer James Spradley’s method of domain analysis[1] for categorizing cultural knowledge. An ethnographer elicits a list of terms, actions, and beliefs from members of a particular cultural group and maps their relations in terms of shared or contrasting features as well as hierarchy.
For example, a domain analysis of medical residents working in an ER might include the slang term “gomer,”[2] to refer pejoratively to a patient who is down and out and admitted to the hospital with untreatable conditions.[3]
Fascinating! The noken definition themes remind me of the ethnographer James Spradley’s method of domain analysis[1] for categorizing cultural knowledge. An ethnographer elicits a list of terms, actions, and beliefs from members of a particular cultural group and maps their relations in terms of shared or contrasting features as well as hierarchy.
For example, a domain analysis of medical residents working in an ER might include the slang term “gomer,”[2] to refer pejoratively to a patient who is down and out and admitted to the hospital with untreatable conditions.[3]
The Ethnographic Interview by James P. Spradley.
e.g., “Get out of my emergency room”
BMJ article on the usage of the term ‘gomer’