Positionality, subjectivity, and race in transnational and transcultural geographical research

This article investigates the complexities of negotiating subject positions in transnational and transcultural research by focusing on the gendering of race and racialization. As more people claim to be of mixed 'racial' descent and Western researchers grow more diverse, it is increasingly...

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Published inGender, place and culture : a journal of feminist geography Vol. 22; no. 4; pp. 456 - 473
Main Author Fisher, Karen T.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Abingdon Routledge 21.04.2015
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Abstract This article investigates the complexities of negotiating subject positions in transnational and transcultural research by focusing on the gendering of race and racialization. As more people claim to be of mixed 'racial' descent and Western researchers grow more diverse, it is increasingly important that this diversity is reflected within geographical research; however, much of the existing research on subjectivity and its role in the research process has focused either on 'white' researchers in Global South contexts or on researchers working in their 'home' country or community. Less visible are accounts from those who challenge conceptions of 'white' Western researcher or whose racial identity can be conceived as hybrid. Moreover, there is a tendency to conceptualize race/racialization and their effects on subjectivity and positionality in relatively narrow terms. This article draws attention to the changing subjectivities of a racialized gendered body as it moves into different contexts. I examine how conceptualizations of race and discourses of racialization constitute researcher subjectivity, and how different understandings of 'race' mediate relationships between researcher and research participants (and others). To understand the spatial (re)configurations of (race) subjectivities and how this affects researcher positionality, I offer an autoethnography of a bi/multiracial Western woman of New Zealand Māori/Pākehā descent interpellated as 'insufficient Other' in her home context of Aotearoa New Zealand, then reconstituted as white and 'sufficient Self' in the Philippines by her research participants and Filipino 'family' and friends.
AbstractList This article investigates the complexities of negotiating subject positions in transnational and transcultural research by focusing on the gendering of race and racialization. As more people claim to be of mixed "racial" descent and Western researchers grow more diverse, it is increasingly important that this diversity is reflected within geographical research; however, much of the existing research on subjectivity and its role in the research process has focused either on "white" researchers in Global South contexts or on researchers working in their "home" country or community. Less visible are accounts from those who challenge conceptions of "white" Western researcher or whose racial identity can be conceived as hybrid. Moreover, there is a tendency to conceptualize race/racialization and their effects on subjectivity and positionality in relatively narrow terms. This article draws attention to the changing subjectivities of a racialized gendered body as it moves into different contexts. I examine how conceptualizations of race and discourses of racialization constitute researcher subjectivity, and how different understandings of "race" mediate relationships between researcher and research participants (and others). To understand the spatial (re)configurations of (race) subjectivities and how this affects researcher positionality, I offer an autoethnography of a bi/multiracial Western woman of New Zealand Maori/Pakeha descent interpellated as "insufficient other" in her home context of Aotearoa New Zealand, then reconstituted as white and "sufficient self" in the Philippines by her research participants and Filipino "family" and friends. // ABSTRACT IN SPANISH: Posicionalidad, subjetividad y raza en la investigación geográfica transnacional y transculturalEste artículo investiga las complejidades de las negociaciones de las posiciones de sujeto en la investigación transnacional y transcultural enfocándose en la generización de la raza y la racialización. A medida que cada vez más personas se proclaman de descendencia racial mixta y los investigadores occidentales se vuelven más diversas, es cada vez más importante que esta diversidad se vea reflejada dentro de la investigación geográfica; sin embargo, gran parte de la investigación existente sobre subjetividad y su rol en el proceso de investigación se ha centrado ya sea en investigadores "blancos" en contextos del Sur Global, o en investigadorxs trabajando en su país o comunidad "de origen". Los relatos de quienes desafían concepciones de investigador/a occidental "blanco" o de cuyas identidades raciales pueden ser concebidas como híbridas son menos visibles. Además, existe una tendencia a conceptualizar la raza/racialización y sus efectos sobre la subjetividad y la posicionalidad en términos relativamente limitados. Este artículo presta atención a las cambiantes subjetividades del cuerpo generizado racializado mientras se mueve en diferentes contextos. Examino cómo las conceptualizaciones de raza y los discursos de racialización constituyen la subjetividad del/a investigador/a y cómo las diferentes formas de entender la "raza" median las relaciones entre el/a investigador/a y los participantes de la investigación (y otros). Para comprender la (re)configuración espacial de subjetividades (de raza) y cómo esto afecta la posicionalidad del/a investigador/a, ofrezco una autoetnografía de una mujer occidental bi/multiracial de Nueva Zelanda de ascendencia Maori/Pakeha interpelada como "Otra insuficiente" en su contexto de origen en Aotearoa Nueva Zelanda, luego reconstituida como blanca e "Individuo suficiente" en las Filipinas por sus participantes en la investigación y "familia" y amigos. Reprinted by permission of Carfax Publishing, Taylor & Francis Ltd.
This article investigates the complexities of negotiating subject positions in transnational and transcultural research by focusing on the gendering of race and racialization. As more people claim to be of mixed 'racial' descent and Western researchers grow more diverse, it is increasingly important that this diversity is reflected within geographical research; however, much of the existing research on subjectivity and its role in the research process has focused either on 'white' researchers in Global South contexts or on researchers working in their 'home' country or community. Less visible are accounts from those who challenge conceptions of 'white' Western researcher or whose racial identity can be conceived as hybrid. Moreover, there is a tendency to conceptualize race/racialization and their effects on subjectivity and positionality in relatively narrow terms. This article draws attention to the changing subjectivities of a racialized gendered body as it moves into different contexts. I examine how conceptualizations of race and discourses of racialization constitute researcher subjectivity, and how different understandings of 'race' mediate relationships between researcher and research participants (and others). To understand the spatial (re)configurations of (race) subjectivities and how this affects researcher positionality, I offer an autoethnography of a bi/multiracial Western woman of New Zealand Maori/Pakeha descent interpellated as 'insufficient Other' in her home context of Aotearoa New Zealand, then reconstituted as white and 'sufficient Self' in the Philippines by her research participants and Filipino 'family' and friends.
This article investigates the complexities of negotiating subject positions in transnational and transcultural research by focusing on the gendering of race and racialization. As more people claim to be of mixed 'racial' descent and Western researchers grow more diverse, it is increasingly important that this diversity is reflected within geographical research; however, much of the existing research on subjectivity and its role in the research process has focused either on 'white' researchers in Global South contexts or on researchers working in their 'home' country or community. Less visible are accounts from those who challenge conceptions of 'white' Western researcher or whose racial identity can be conceived as hybrid. Moreover, there is a tendency to conceptualize race/racialization and their effects on subjectivity and positionality in relatively narrow terms. This article draws attention to the changing subjectivities of a racialized gendered body as it moves into different contexts. I examine how conceptualizations of race and discourses of racialization constitute researcher subjectivity, and how different understandings of 'race' mediate relationships between researcher and research participants (and others). To understand the spatial (re)configurations of (race) subjectivities and how this affects researcher positionality, I offer an autoethnography of a bi/multiracial Western woman of New Zealand Māori/Pākehā descent interpellated as 'insufficient Other' in her home context of Aotearoa New Zealand, then reconstituted as white and 'sufficient Self' in the Philippines by her research participants and Filipino 'family' and friends.
This article investigates the complexities of negotiating subject positions in transnational and transcultural research by focusing on the gendering of race and racialization. As more people claim to be of mixed 'racial' descent and Western researchers grow more diverse, it is increasingly important that this diversity is reflected within geographical research; however, much of the existing research on subjectivity and its role in the research process has focused either on 'white' researchers in Global South contexts or on researchers working in their 'home' country or community. Less visible are accounts from those who challenge conceptions of 'white' Western researcher or whose racial identity can be conceived as hybrid. Moreover, there is a tendency to conceptualize race/racialization and their effects on subjectivity and positionality in relatively narrow terms. This article draws attention to the changing subjectivities of a racialized gendered body as it moves into different contexts. I examine how conceptualizations of race and discourses of racialization constitute researcher subjectivity, and how different understandings of 'race' mediate relationships between researcher and research participants (and others). To understand the spatial (re)configurations of (race) subjectivities and how this affects researcher positionality, I offer an autoethnography of a bi/multiracial Western woman of New Zealand Maori/Pakeha descent interpellated as 'insufficient Other' in her home context of Aotearoa New Zealand, then reconstituted as white and 'sufficient Self' in the Philippines by her research participants and Filipino 'family' and friends. Adapted from the source document.
Author Fisher, Karen T.
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Snippet This article investigates the complexities of negotiating subject positions in transnational and transcultural research by focusing on the gendering of race...
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SubjectTerms Cultural Pluralism
Culture
Discourse analysis
Ethnic Identity
Ethnicity
Friendship
Gender
Geography
mana wahine
Maori
Mixed race
Māori
New Zealand
Philippines
posicionalidad
positionality
Race
Racial identity
racialización
racialization
raza
Researcher Subject Relations
Subjectivity
subjetividad
Transnationalism
Whites
Women
主体性
位置性
女性权力党
毛利
种族
种族化
Title Positionality, subjectivity, and race in transnational and transcultural geographical research
URI https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0966369X.2013.879097
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1660132344
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1672875408
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1752996148
Volume 22
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