Abstract:Research on gendered politics of the field has delved into the practices of accompaniment and its implications on research and knowledge production, particularly through the case of researchers’ children and partners. In comparison, the tendency to seek assistance from parents is neglected within the scholarship. Drawing on the PhD fieldwork experiences of two researchers in their “native” country, specifically a Sri Lankan researcher conducting fieldwork in Sri Lanka and a North Indian scholar researching in … Show more
“…The myth and the always partial reality of the solitary researcher Once sidelined to footnotes and acknowledgements, research companions have increasingly been rendered visible and their contributions considered in scholarly writing. Publications typically focus on accompanying family members (De Silva & Gandhi, 2019;Flinn et al, 1998;Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014;Taylor, 2014), especially children (Cornet & Blumenfield, 2016;Cupples & Kindon, 2003;Farrelly et al, 2014;Frohlick, 2002;Johnston, 2015;Korpela et al, 2016;Starrs et al, 2001;Tripp, 2002), and research assistants or associates (Fertaly & Fluri, 2019;Gold et al, 2014;Middleton & Cons, 2014;Turner, 2010), with some mention of supervisors, students, colleagues, pets, editors, and other collaborators (Gupta, 2014;Heller et al, 2011;Swanson, 2008).…”
Section: Provocative Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Flinn (1998) criticizes the persistent model of the lone male fieldworker, pointing to the colonial roots of the image popularized by celebrated ethnographer Bronislaw Malinowski who argued that 'proper conditions for ethnographic fieldwork […] consist mainly in cutting oneself off from the company of other white men' (Malinowski, 1961, in Flinn, 1998. Despite growing acceptance of feminist epistemologies and methodologies over the past two decades, such rhetoric continues to shape the way scholars conceive of legitimate academic research (De Silva & Gandhi, 2019). The normalized image of a professional fieldworker, for example, still displays a considerable degree of bravado and machismo, and is easily mobile, ever energetic, able-bodied, fit, and solitary (Bono et al, 2019;De Silva & Gandhi, 2019;Frohlick, 2002;Gottlieb, 1995;Jokinen & Caretta, 2016;Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014).…”
Section: Provocative Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Matthew Sparke (1996) describes the portrayal of fieldwork as a ‘character‐building rite of passage’ in which the field is:Flinn (1998) criticizes the persistent model of the lone male fieldworker, pointing to the colonial roots of the image popularized by celebrated ethnographer Bronislaw Malinowski who argued that ‘proper conditions for ethnographic fieldwork […] consist mainly in cutting oneself off from the company of other white men’ (Malinowski, 1961, in Flinn, 1998: 6). Despite growing acceptance of feminist epistemologies and methodologies over the past two decades, such rhetoric continues to shape the way scholars conceive of legitimate academic research (De Silva & Gandhi, 2019). The normalized image of a professional fieldworker, for example, still displays a considerable degree of bravado and machismo, and is easily mobile, ever energetic, able‐bodied, fit, and solitary (Bono et al ., 2019; De Silva & Gandhi, 2019; Frohlick, 2002; Gottlieb, 1995; Jokinen & Caretta, 2016; Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014).…”
Section: The Myth and The Always Partial Reality Of The Solitary Researchermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite growing acceptance of feminist epistemologies and methodologies over the past two decades, such rhetoric continues to shape the way scholars conceive of legitimate academic research (De Silva & Gandhi, 2019). The normalized image of a professional fieldworker, for example, still displays a considerable degree of bravado and machismo, and is easily mobile, ever energetic, able‐bodied, fit, and solitary (Bono et al ., 2019; De Silva & Gandhi, 2019; Frohlick, 2002; Gottlieb, 1995; Jokinen & Caretta, 2016; Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014).…”
Section: The Myth and The Always Partial Reality Of The Solitary Researchermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The gendered, classed and racialized positions, and the degree of respectability and status, attributed to a researcher are different depending on whether or not they are accompanied (Cornet, 2010; 2013; Cupples & Kindon, 2003; Jenkins, 2020; Korpela et al ., 2016; Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014; Seiler Gilmore, 1998; Swanson, 2008). The perceived identities and positionalities of research companions, especially local research assistants and local family members, similarly matter in determining access to resources in the field and the content of information divulged by research subjects, and in shaping research outcomes (Cupples & Kindon, 2003; De Silva & Gandhi, 2019; Flinn, 1998; Gold et al ., 2014; Gupta, 2014; Heller et al ., 2011; Jenkins, 2018; Swanson, 2008; Taylor, 2014; Turner, 2010).…”
Section: The Myth and The Always Partial Reality Of The Solitary Researchermentioning
Writing in our research companions, with attention to the importance of care in our fieldwork practices, is a political act that challenges the ways geography is believed to be practised, or should be practised. Once sidelined to footnotes and acknowledgements, research companions such as family members and research assistants have increasingly been rendered visible and their contributions considered. Yet, researchers remain reluctant to disclose their accompanied research in scholarly writing. Given this reticence, I contend that, collectively, such accounts are political acts and not warts-and-all disclosures of knowledge production. They challenge disciplinary norms over whose and which contributions count, and what constitutes a professional identity. Drawing upon Lynn Staeheli's (1996) insights into the potential for activism by transgressing boundaries of doing private acts in public spaces, and public acts in private spaces, I argue that doing and writing about accompanied fieldwork is fieldwork activism that re-centres and values a caring geography.
“…The myth and the always partial reality of the solitary researcher Once sidelined to footnotes and acknowledgements, research companions have increasingly been rendered visible and their contributions considered in scholarly writing. Publications typically focus on accompanying family members (De Silva & Gandhi, 2019;Flinn et al, 1998;Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014;Taylor, 2014), especially children (Cornet & Blumenfield, 2016;Cupples & Kindon, 2003;Farrelly et al, 2014;Frohlick, 2002;Johnston, 2015;Korpela et al, 2016;Starrs et al, 2001;Tripp, 2002), and research assistants or associates (Fertaly & Fluri, 2019;Gold et al, 2014;Middleton & Cons, 2014;Turner, 2010), with some mention of supervisors, students, colleagues, pets, editors, and other collaborators (Gupta, 2014;Heller et al, 2011;Swanson, 2008).…”
Section: Provocative Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Flinn (1998) criticizes the persistent model of the lone male fieldworker, pointing to the colonial roots of the image popularized by celebrated ethnographer Bronislaw Malinowski who argued that 'proper conditions for ethnographic fieldwork […] consist mainly in cutting oneself off from the company of other white men' (Malinowski, 1961, in Flinn, 1998. Despite growing acceptance of feminist epistemologies and methodologies over the past two decades, such rhetoric continues to shape the way scholars conceive of legitimate academic research (De Silva & Gandhi, 2019). The normalized image of a professional fieldworker, for example, still displays a considerable degree of bravado and machismo, and is easily mobile, ever energetic, able-bodied, fit, and solitary (Bono et al, 2019;De Silva & Gandhi, 2019;Frohlick, 2002;Gottlieb, 1995;Jokinen & Caretta, 2016;Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014).…”
Section: Provocative Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Matthew Sparke (1996) describes the portrayal of fieldwork as a ‘character‐building rite of passage’ in which the field is:Flinn (1998) criticizes the persistent model of the lone male fieldworker, pointing to the colonial roots of the image popularized by celebrated ethnographer Bronislaw Malinowski who argued that ‘proper conditions for ethnographic fieldwork […] consist mainly in cutting oneself off from the company of other white men’ (Malinowski, 1961, in Flinn, 1998: 6). Despite growing acceptance of feminist epistemologies and methodologies over the past two decades, such rhetoric continues to shape the way scholars conceive of legitimate academic research (De Silva & Gandhi, 2019). The normalized image of a professional fieldworker, for example, still displays a considerable degree of bravado and machismo, and is easily mobile, ever energetic, able‐bodied, fit, and solitary (Bono et al ., 2019; De Silva & Gandhi, 2019; Frohlick, 2002; Gottlieb, 1995; Jokinen & Caretta, 2016; Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014).…”
Section: The Myth and The Always Partial Reality Of The Solitary Researchermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite growing acceptance of feminist epistemologies and methodologies over the past two decades, such rhetoric continues to shape the way scholars conceive of legitimate academic research (De Silva & Gandhi, 2019). The normalized image of a professional fieldworker, for example, still displays a considerable degree of bravado and machismo, and is easily mobile, ever energetic, able‐bodied, fit, and solitary (Bono et al ., 2019; De Silva & Gandhi, 2019; Frohlick, 2002; Gottlieb, 1995; Jokinen & Caretta, 2016; Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014).…”
Section: The Myth and The Always Partial Reality Of The Solitary Researchermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The gendered, classed and racialized positions, and the degree of respectability and status, attributed to a researcher are different depending on whether or not they are accompanied (Cornet, 2010; 2013; Cupples & Kindon, 2003; Jenkins, 2020; Korpela et al ., 2016; Lunn & Moscuzza, 2014; Seiler Gilmore, 1998; Swanson, 2008). The perceived identities and positionalities of research companions, especially local research assistants and local family members, similarly matter in determining access to resources in the field and the content of information divulged by research subjects, and in shaping research outcomes (Cupples & Kindon, 2003; De Silva & Gandhi, 2019; Flinn, 1998; Gold et al ., 2014; Gupta, 2014; Heller et al ., 2011; Jenkins, 2018; Swanson, 2008; Taylor, 2014; Turner, 2010).…”
Section: The Myth and The Always Partial Reality Of The Solitary Researchermentioning
Writing in our research companions, with attention to the importance of care in our fieldwork practices, is a political act that challenges the ways geography is believed to be practised, or should be practised. Once sidelined to footnotes and acknowledgements, research companions such as family members and research assistants have increasingly been rendered visible and their contributions considered. Yet, researchers remain reluctant to disclose their accompanied research in scholarly writing. Given this reticence, I contend that, collectively, such accounts are political acts and not warts-and-all disclosures of knowledge production. They challenge disciplinary norms over whose and which contributions count, and what constitutes a professional identity. Drawing upon Lynn Staeheli's (1996) insights into the potential for activism by transgressing boundaries of doing private acts in public spaces, and public acts in private spaces, I argue that doing and writing about accompanied fieldwork is fieldwork activism that re-centres and values a caring geography.
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