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Strangers, Friends, and Kin: Negotiated Recognition in Ethnographic Relationships
Author(s) -
Thomas Todne
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
anthropology and humanism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.153
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 1548-1409
pISSN - 1559-9167
DOI - 10.1111/anhu.12108
Subject(s) - ethnography , sociology , participant observation , sister , postmodernism , gender studies , anthropology , epistemology , philosophy
SUMMARY Anthropologists have framed ethnographers as participant‐observers, strangers, and friends and have written about ethnographic research encounters in terms of the productive spaces between researchers and research collaborators. Informed by my review of research literature on ethnographic relationships, my application of de‐colonial, feminist, and postmodern research methodologies, and my experience of being reconstituted as a “[church] sister” by the members of an Afro‐West Indian and African American evangelical church association, I argue that characterizations of research encounters by research collaborators hold important implications for ethnographic research and writing.

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