A1 Vertaisarvioitu alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä lehdessä

Politicized and depoliticized ethnicities, power relations and temporality: insights to outsider research from comparative and transnational fieldwork




TekijätBahar Baser, Mari Toivanen

KustantajaTaylor & Francis

Julkaisuvuosi2018

JournalEthnic and Racial Studies

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiEthnic and Racial Studies

Vuosikerta41

Numero11

Aloitussivu2067

Lopetussivu2084

Sivujen määrä18

ISSN0141-9870

eISSN0141-9870

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2017.1348530


Tiivistelmä

The insider and outsider positions in migration studies have conventionally been approached in terms of ethnic or national belonging. Recently scholars have problematized the essentialist approaches to these roles by arguing for the inclusion of multiple intersecting social locations that are at play in the constitution of researcher positionality. Less attention has been paid, however, on how different ethnicities are constructed and how they can become politicized and depoliticized at particular moments during the research process. This article discusses the fieldwork experiences of two “apparent outsiders” to the studied diaspora community. Drawing from our experiences in multi-sited and comparative fieldwork on the Kurdish diaspora, we argue that rather than taking insider and outsider positions as a starting-point to understand researcher positionality, scholars need to look at particular moments of insiderness and outsiderness to grasp how the researcher’s assumed ethnicity becomes politicized and depoliticized during ethnographic fieldwork.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 23:40