Artigo Revisado por pares

"Do You Really Live Here?" Thoughts on Insider Research

2001; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 91; Issue: 1/2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/3250847

ISSN

1931-0846

Autores

Dydia DeLyser,

Tópico(s)

Qualitative Research Methods and Applications

Resumo

********** One summer Saturday I was sitting at living-room table in a run-down old house in gold-mining ghost town of Bodie, a California State Historic Park located in high-altitude desert east of Sierra Nevada. Signs on outside walls of house identified it as an Employees' residence. A nearby number post linked building to park's self-guided-tour brochure, which described it as the Gregory House and detailed lives of home's historic inhabitants. I was busy writing when small running footsteps approached: children, some of 200,000 or so annual visitors to Bodie. A brown-haired girl of about eight and her towheaded kid brother strained to pierce relative darkness inside house. What they saw was me. Turning away from window, girl hollered to her parents, There's a guy in there! And he's dead! Lie died writing! Being taken for dead--and for a man--may seem shocking to some, but this was not only time that I was seen as a ghost--or as a man--during fourteen summers that I worked and did fieldwork in Bodie. (1) But experiences like this one led me to contemplate interactions between my physical presence and my role as in public place that I was trying to study. As a I was interested in how visitors and staff understood Bodie's past and made room for it in their present, in how they made meaning in and from landscape. But as a staff member and part of Bodie I myself was part of that process. An important aspect of my work became understanding how I was a part of my own research and negotiating challenges that being an presented. STUDYING YOUR OWN COMMUNITY Because gaining perspective on something you're in middle of poses distinct challenges, texts on qualitative research methods often advise students not to study communities or situations of which they are already part. Robert Bogdan and Sari Biklen warn that since qualitative researchers regularly focus on taken for granted, starting with an insider's perspective can make research harder rather than easier (1998, 52). You may fail to notice pertinent questions or issues because of inability to step back from a situation and fully assess circumstances, add Rob Kitchin and Nicholas Tate (2000, 29). The may be over-familiar with community, leading to much at expense of observation, cautions Mel Evans (1988, 205). Furthermore, that can lead to other problems: Anselm Strauss warns that those who literally live a study may know too much experientially and descriptively about phenomena they are studying and so [end up] literally flooded with m aterials (1987, 29). Those with a preexisting role can find that role in contradiction with separate status of researcher; transition between roles may cause personal difficulties; and ethical issues may arise when studying coworkers, particularly if a is in a position of power over them (Bogdan and Biklen 1998, 52). Flying in face of all that good advice, some researchers, like me, find topics close to home, or close to our hearts--topics so compelling we can't leave them alone--and we try to find ways to use our insider status to help, not hinder, insights. Of course, distinction between insiders and outsiders is not a simple one. (2) When anthropologists are adopted by their communities, they may be criticized for going native (Tedlock 2000), and warnings against this are probably even more prevalent than are those against studying one's own community (Strauss 1987; Reinharz 1992). To me, difference seems significant: Those who go native begin as outsiders, whereas those of us who study our own communities start as insiders and are natives before research begins--a distinction not widely acknowledged in literature. Some writers who describe complete participation (Kearns 2000) or a complete member researcher (Ellis and Bochner 2000) fail to distinguish between researchers who start by studying their own communities and really quite distinct circumstance of growing deeply involved in a community after research is begun. …

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