2017
DOI: 10.1080/0966369x.2017.1372374
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Towards transnational feminist queer methodologies

Abstract: This article introduces the possibilities of transnational feminist queer research as seeking to conceptualise the transnational as a methodology composed of a series of flows that can augment feminist and queer research. Transnational feminist queer methodologies can contest long-standing configurations of power between researcher and researched, subject and object, academics and activists across places, typically those which are embedded in the hierarchies of the Global North/Global South. Beginning with cha… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…Inspired by transnational feminist studies (Browne et al ; Grewal and Kaplan , ; Kim‐Puri ), the proposed transnational queer sociology engages with both queer Asian studies and the sociology of homosexuality in several ways. First, I use transnationalism rather than globalization to address the asymmetries of the globalization process that reproduce spatial inequalities and patterns of exclusion (Grewal and Kaplan ), thus allowing examination of differential cross‐border processes, flows and practices.…”
Section: Transnational Queer Sociologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inspired by transnational feminist studies (Browne et al ; Grewal and Kaplan , ; Kim‐Puri ), the proposed transnational queer sociology engages with both queer Asian studies and the sociology of homosexuality in several ways. First, I use transnationalism rather than globalization to address the asymmetries of the globalization process that reproduce spatial inequalities and patterns of exclusion (Grewal and Kaplan ), thus allowing examination of differential cross‐border processes, flows and practices.…”
Section: Transnational Queer Sociologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Waite and Conn 2011). Likewise, Browne et al (2017) refuse comparability or categorisation of India or the UK in reductive ways, holding space open for diverse methods, analyses and actions. Such attempts never claim an impossible 'best practice', rather continuously contending with situated inequalities.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All of this means that very little -if any -qualitative social science research is or can be value-free, however "objective" social science researchers think they are; in turn, the resulting research affects the individuals, social groups, and/or communities under investigation. Additionally, as Browne et al (2017) observe,…”
Section: Researcher Positionality and Reflexivity: Coming From The Inmentioning
confidence: 59%
“…It is complemented by a gamut of variable, intersectional, and interlocking factors, such as the researcher's identities, including ethnicity/race, gender/gender identity, sexuality, socio-economic status and/or class, educational background, dis/ability, political views, religious beliefs, etc. Browne et al (2017) understand these identities as "reiterated performativities, that are not fixed over the course of the project, but are also seen as relationally constituted, (re-)created through interactions between people, places and things (…), and requiring explicit and ongoing self-reflectivities (…)" (2017, 1379).…”
Section: Researcher Positionality and Reflexivity: Coming From The Inmentioning
confidence: 99%