对话者

IF 0.4 0 RELIGION
L. Leve
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自20世纪80年代以来,民族志学家面临的一个重大挑战是,如何将他们的关系命名为与他们产生知识的人以及关于他们的人。在对“线人”一词如何编码和再现殖民权力动态提出批评后,民族志学家们寻求替代语言来描述基于实地调查的关系。本文考察了最常用的术语之一——“对话者”,并考虑了采用一个强调声音和言论而非具体参与的词的含义。“对话者”对当代学者很有吸引力,因为它用反映现代世俗意识形态的词汇表达了对与我们共事的人的尊重。然而,推进非殖民化目标的研究可能与其说依赖于改变民族志表现风格,不如说依赖于通过具体化的经验和关系实践,将民族志学家和民族志研究开放给其他认识和存在的方式。当宗教的民族志学家主要将与我们合作的人作为声音来参与时,我们会给自己造成误解,并错过麻烦帝国知识结构的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Interlocutors
A significant challenge for ethnographers since the 1980s has been how to name their relationships to the people with whom and about whom they produce knowledge. Following critiques of how the term “informant” encodes and reproduces colonial power dynamics, ethnographers have sought alternative language to describe fieldwork-based relations. This article examines one of the most commonly used terms—“interlocutor”—and considers the implications of adopting a word that emphasizes voice and speech over embodied participation. “Interlocutor” is appealing to contemporary scholars because it signals respect for the people we work with using a vocabulary that reflects modern secular ideologies. Yet, research that advances decolonial goals may depend less on transforming styles of ethnographic representation than on opening the ethnographer and ethnographic inquiry to other ways of knowing and being, via embodied experience and relational practices. When ethnographers of religion engage the people we work with primarily as voices we set ourselves up for misunderstanding and miss opportunities to trouble imperial structures of knowledge.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: Fieldwork in Religion (FIR) is a peer reviewed, interdisciplinary journal seeking engagement between scholars carrying out empirical research in religion. It will consider articles from established scholars and research students. The purpose of Fieldwork in Religion is to promote critical investigation into all aspects of the empirical study of contemporary religion. The journal is interdisciplinary in that it is not limited to the fields of anthropology and ethnography. Fieldwork in Religion seeks to promote empirical study of religion in all disciplines: religious studies, anthropology, ethnography, sociology, psychology, folklore, or cultural studies. A further important aim of Fieldwork in Religion is to encourage the discussion of methodology in fieldwork either through discrete articles on issues of methodology or by publishing fieldwork case studies that include methodological challenges and the impact of methodology on the results of empirical research.
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