{"title":"Sexual Harassment and Construction of Ethnographic Knowledge","authors":"Jason Laker","doi":"10.1177/10608265221108206","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"When I took up my post as Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Men’s Studies on January 1, 2021, I sought to implement the various ideas and ambitions that had led me to pursue the role. My own career in higher education began in 1992, which happened to be the same year this journal was founded by my predecessor, Dr. James Doyle. At that time, I had very limited knowledge about our interdisciplinary field, and relied on venues such as this one to become familiar with the vocabularies, theories, debates, questions, applications, and general contours of men’s and masculinities studies. The past 30 years have certainly been dynamic in this regard, as all these things have evolved into a robust constellation of theoretical and actionable knowledge, inquiry, and conversations. Likewise, as with other disciplines, there are professional values, ethical obligations, and normative conventions associated with our field that—while sometimes contested— provide for guidance on how we conduct our inquiry and applied work. When I teach or present about topics having to do with men and masculinities, I typically begin with what I call ethical housekeeping, taking a few moments to address some of the complexities and politically loaded elements associated with focusing time and attention on men and masculinities issues. It should be obvious—given that I am serving as JMS’ Editor-in-Chief—that I believe it is important to do so. Yet, I also recognize and choose to affirm through this practice that there is much unfinished business regarding the identities, statuses, and experiences of people who do not identify as men even as there remains such for those who do. I also believe that all our respective unfinished business items are inextricably linked, even as there is considerable variation in their forms, impacts, and implications depending on which issues, people, and contexts are involved. In any event, I have been thinking and engaging with","PeriodicalId":22686,"journal":{"name":"The Journal of Men's Studies","volume":"1935 1","pages":"311 - 320"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Journal of Men's Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/10608265221108206","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
When I took up my post as Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Men’s Studies on January 1, 2021, I sought to implement the various ideas and ambitions that had led me to pursue the role. My own career in higher education began in 1992, which happened to be the same year this journal was founded by my predecessor, Dr. James Doyle. At that time, I had very limited knowledge about our interdisciplinary field, and relied on venues such as this one to become familiar with the vocabularies, theories, debates, questions, applications, and general contours of men’s and masculinities studies. The past 30 years have certainly been dynamic in this regard, as all these things have evolved into a robust constellation of theoretical and actionable knowledge, inquiry, and conversations. Likewise, as with other disciplines, there are professional values, ethical obligations, and normative conventions associated with our field that—while sometimes contested— provide for guidance on how we conduct our inquiry and applied work. When I teach or present about topics having to do with men and masculinities, I typically begin with what I call ethical housekeeping, taking a few moments to address some of the complexities and politically loaded elements associated with focusing time and attention on men and masculinities issues. It should be obvious—given that I am serving as JMS’ Editor-in-Chief—that I believe it is important to do so. Yet, I also recognize and choose to affirm through this practice that there is much unfinished business regarding the identities, statuses, and experiences of people who do not identify as men even as there remains such for those who do. I also believe that all our respective unfinished business items are inextricably linked, even as there is considerable variation in their forms, impacts, and implications depending on which issues, people, and contexts are involved. In any event, I have been thinking and engaging with
当我于2021年1月1日担任《男性研究杂志》(Journal of Men’s Studies)主编时,我试图实现促使我担任这一职务的各种想法和抱负。我自己在高等教育领域的职业生涯始于1992年,而我的前任詹姆斯·多伊尔博士恰好在同一年创办了这本杂志。当时,我对我们这个跨学科领域的知识非常有限,依靠这样的场所来熟悉男性和男性研究的词汇、理论、辩论、问题、应用和总体轮廓。在这方面,过去的30年无疑是充满活力的,因为所有这些事情都已经演变成一个强大的理论和可操作的知识、调查和对话的星座。同样,与其他学科一样,与我们的领域相关的专业价值观、道德义务和规范惯例(尽管有时存在争议)为我们如何开展调查和应用工作提供了指导。当我教授或演讲与男性和男子气概有关的话题时,我通常会从我所谓的道德管家开始,花点时间来解决一些复杂性和政治负载因素,这些因素与把时间和注意力集中在男性和男子气概问题上有关。很明显,鉴于我是JMS的主编,我认为这样做很重要。然而,我也认识到,并选择通过这个实践来肯定,关于那些不认同自己是男人的人的身份、地位和经历,还有很多未完成的事情,即使那些认同自己是男人的人仍然有这些事情。我也相信,所有我们各自未完成的项目都是密不可分的,即使它们的形式、影响和含义都有很大的不同,这取决于所涉及的问题、人物和背景。无论如何,我一直在思考和参与