游牧民族道德

S. Carter
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引用次数: 21

摘要

为了回应莫琳·弗林特(Maureen Flint)(2020)的表演和论文《指纹和纸浆》(fingerprint and Pulp),该论文讨论了在定性研究中截断和扁平化研究参与者的伦理问题,我将这种伦理关注扩展到在定性研究和写作过程中扁平化的学者的声音。学者们引用的理由有很多,但有什么能让我们对之前对待学者的方式负责呢?我们怎样才能避免将我们引用的内容扁平化和滥用呢?通过在研究和写作过程中努力识别和保护作者以外的鬼魂和游牧身份,我提出了一种新的方式,重新激活和体现被引用文本中萦绕的游牧声音,以便进一步减少学术写作中对他者的截断和限制。关注鬼魂可以让人们对那些被引用的人做出更合乎道德和公正的行为。看到困扰学术著作的众多幽灵,促使人们对那些在写作中被压制的声音采取更合乎道德的行为。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nomadic Ethics
In response to Maureen Flint’s (2020) performance and essay, Fingerprints and Pulp, on the ethics of truncating and flattening research participants in qualitative research, I extend this ethical concern to the voices of scholars flattened in qualitative research and writing processes. Scholars cite for many reasons, but what is there that holds us to account for our treatments of academics that come before; how can we avoid flattening and abusing those we cite? Through endeavouring to recognise and protect ghosts and nomadic identities of those other than the author in the research and writing process, I propose a new way of re-animating and re-embodying the haunting, nomadic voices in cited texts, in order to minimise further, future truncations and limitations of the other in academic writing. Attending to the ghosts allows for more ethical and just behaviour towards those cited. Seeing the multitude of ghosts haunting scholarly work obliges more ethical behaviour toward those voices flattened in writing. 
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