The long shadows cast by the field: violence, trauma, and the ethnographic researcher

As more geographers utilise ethnographic methods to explore pressing contemporary issues such as abandonment, precarity, and resilience, they enter into research environments often defined by social marginality and violence. There are emotional and psychological risks associated with embedded resea...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stephen Taylor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 2019-12-01
Series:Fennia: International Journal of Geography
Online Access:https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/84792
id doaj-1f77d61427204b32964e949d3509ed4b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1f77d61427204b32964e949d3509ed4b2020-11-25T02:49:02ZengGeographical Society of FinlandFennia: International Journal of Geography1798-56172019-12-01197210.11143/fennia.84792The long shadows cast by the field: violence, trauma, and the ethnographic researcherStephen Taylor0Queen Mary University of London As more geographers utilise ethnographic methods to explore pressing contemporary issues such as abandonment, precarity, and resilience, they enter into research environments often defined by social marginality and violence. There are emotional and psychological risks associated with embedded research in such contexts, however these challenges have largely been ignored in existing methodological literatures. A frank debate is needed about the emotional and psychological burden that ethnographic research can exact upon lone researchers and how these burdens interface with researcher identity and positionality. Drawing on a reflexive analysis of the author’s experience of fieldwork in South Africa, this paper highlights the emotional consequences of conducting ethnographic research with marginal groups in dangerous contexts. It specifically examines the ripple effect of exposure to traumatic events that culminated in the author’s diagnosis with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In so doing, the paper draws attention to the acute emotional and psychological consequences of ethnographic research, while also challenging prevalent professional attitudes within the neoliberal university that promote the downplaying or silencing of such repercussions. The paper concludes with a series of suggestions for how (early career) researchers, our discipline, and institutions might better promote and realise an ethic of collective care for field researchers. https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/84792
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen Taylor
spellingShingle Stephen Taylor
The long shadows cast by the field: violence, trauma, and the ethnographic researcher
Fennia: International Journal of Geography
author_facet Stephen Taylor
author_sort Stephen Taylor
title The long shadows cast by the field: violence, trauma, and the ethnographic researcher
title_short The long shadows cast by the field: violence, trauma, and the ethnographic researcher
title_full The long shadows cast by the field: violence, trauma, and the ethnographic researcher
title_fullStr The long shadows cast by the field: violence, trauma, and the ethnographic researcher
title_full_unstemmed The long shadows cast by the field: violence, trauma, and the ethnographic researcher
title_sort long shadows cast by the field: violence, trauma, and the ethnographic researcher
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
series Fennia: International Journal of Geography
issn 1798-5617
publishDate 2019-12-01
description As more geographers utilise ethnographic methods to explore pressing contemporary issues such as abandonment, precarity, and resilience, they enter into research environments often defined by social marginality and violence. There are emotional and psychological risks associated with embedded research in such contexts, however these challenges have largely been ignored in existing methodological literatures. A frank debate is needed about the emotional and psychological burden that ethnographic research can exact upon lone researchers and how these burdens interface with researcher identity and positionality. Drawing on a reflexive analysis of the author’s experience of fieldwork in South Africa, this paper highlights the emotional consequences of conducting ethnographic research with marginal groups in dangerous contexts. It specifically examines the ripple effect of exposure to traumatic events that culminated in the author’s diagnosis with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In so doing, the paper draws attention to the acute emotional and psychological consequences of ethnographic research, while also challenging prevalent professional attitudes within the neoliberal university that promote the downplaying or silencing of such repercussions. The paper concludes with a series of suggestions for how (early career) researchers, our discipline, and institutions might better promote and realise an ethic of collective care for field researchers.
url https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/84792
work_keys_str_mv AT stephentaylor thelongshadowscastbythefieldviolencetraumaandtheethnographicresearcher
AT stephentaylor longshadowscastbythefieldviolencetraumaandtheethnographicresearcher
_version_ 1724745203424690176