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Ethnographic group
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An ethnographic group or ethnocultural group is a group that has cultural traits that make it stand out from the larger it is a part of.

(2012). 9781409487807, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.. .
In other words, members of an ethnographic group will also consider themselves to be members of a larger ethnic group, both sharing a collective consciousness with it, and possessing their own distinct one.Wojciech Janicki, The distribution and significance of Tatar ethnic group in Poland Ethnographic groups are presumed to be significantly assimilated with the larger ethnic group they are part of, though they retain distinctive, differentiating characteristics related to cultural values such as speech, religion, costume, or other cultural aspects.
(2014). 9781782382973, Berghahn Books. .

The concept of an ethnographic group is rarely found in Western works, and has been attributed to late 20th-century ethnographic studies in the countries of the former and its . This term has been used for example in works of Bulgarian, Georgian, Hungarian

(2025). 9783830984436, Waxmann Verlag GmbH. .
and Polish
(1997). 9788322607428, Wydawn. Uniwersytetu Śląskiego. .
ethnographers.

Paul R. Magocsi, an American historian specializing in Ukrainian studies, described the concept of an ethnographic group as closely related to that of the ethnic group.

(1978). 9780674805798, Harvard University Press. .
Some scholars use the term ethnographic group as a synonym to ethnic group.
(1999). 9788322608500, Wydawn. Uniwersytetu Śląskiego. .
The concept of the ethnographic group as distinct from ethnic group has been rejected by some scholars; and it has been argued that most recent studies do not distinguish between the concepts of ethnographic and ethnic groups.
(1995). 9781858660226, Central European University Press. .

An example of an ethnographic group division would be dividing the Subcarpathian Rus ethnic group into , and ethnographic groups. Other groups that have been described by some scholars as ethnographic groups include in Bulgaria, in Poland, and in Georgia, in Germany and Feylis in Iraq and Iran.


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