'Wearing down of the self': Embodiment, writing and disruptions of identity in transformational festival fieldwork. Issue 1 (August 2017)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- 'Wearing down of the self': Embodiment, writing and disruptions of identity in transformational festival fieldwork. Issue 1 (August 2017)
- Main Title:
- 'Wearing down of the self': Embodiment, writing and disruptions of identity in transformational festival fieldwork
- Authors:
- Ruane, Deirdre
- Abstract:
- Immersive ethnographic research can be profoundly destabilising for researchers' sense of identity, and the attempt to inhabit and reconcile dual identities as researcher and participant can take a severe emotional toll. Prior to the reflexive turn in qualitative sociology, this identity work remained largely unacknowledged. Feminist critiques of positivist social science, along with personal accounts portraying the messy, chaotic aspects of research, have helped to create a new climate in which researchers can openly examine their identity conflicts and even recognise them as an integral part of their research. However, advice on navigating these situations remains somewhat limited. This article is a reflexive account of issues encountered while researching the practice of psychedelic support – the provision of emergency care to people undergoing drug-related crises – within the transformational festival scene in the United Kingdom, the United States and Portugal. Transformational festival settings are engineered to disrupt everyday experiences of identity and selfhood and induce emotional vulnerability. Thus, they throw issues of researcher identity and its management into sharp relief. Physically and emotionally intense fieldwork settings can bring about non-ordinary mental states in the researcher which can put habitual working practices and capacities out of reach. This effect contributed to a painful disjunction between my researcher and participant identities, whichImmersive ethnographic research can be profoundly destabilising for researchers' sense of identity, and the attempt to inhabit and reconcile dual identities as researcher and participant can take a severe emotional toll. Prior to the reflexive turn in qualitative sociology, this identity work remained largely unacknowledged. Feminist critiques of positivist social science, along with personal accounts portraying the messy, chaotic aspects of research, have helped to create a new climate in which researchers can openly examine their identity conflicts and even recognise them as an integral part of their research. However, advice on navigating these situations remains somewhat limited. This article is a reflexive account of issues encountered while researching the practice of psychedelic support – the provision of emergency care to people undergoing drug-related crises – within the transformational festival scene in the United Kingdom, the United States and Portugal. Transformational festival settings are engineered to disrupt everyday experiences of identity and selfhood and induce emotional vulnerability. Thus, they throw issues of researcher identity and its management into sharp relief. Physically and emotionally intense fieldwork settings can bring about non-ordinary mental states in the researcher which can put habitual working practices and capacities out of reach. This effect contributed to a painful disjunction between my researcher and participant identities, which centred on the struggle to create linear, written narratives of largely embodied and non-verbal experiences. However, I found that the effect was somewhat mitigated by developing fluid, non-linear, multisensory working practices and documentation methods which were more appropriate to the research setting and the mental states it induced. I conclude that ethnographers in intense or extreme field settings can benefit greatly from methods and tools which work even when we are out of our everyday minds. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Methodological innovations. Volume 10:Issue 1(2017)
- Journal:
- Methodological innovations
- Issue:
- Volume 10:Issue 1(2017)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 10, Issue 1 (2017)
- Year:
- 2017
- Volume:
- 10
- Issue:
- 1
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2017-0010-0001-0000
- Page Start:
- Page End:
- Publication Date:
- 2017-08
- Subjects:
- Psychedelic support -- harm reduction -- reflexive analysis -- ethnography -- fieldwork -- fieldnotes -- hidden populations -- transformational festivals -- identity
Research -- Methodology -- Periodicals
Social sciences -- Methodology -- Periodicals
300.72 - Journal URLs:
- https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/methodological-innovations/journal202509 ↗
https://journals.sagepub.com/home/miob ↗
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/home.nav ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1177/2059799117720611 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 2059-7991
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - BLDSS-3PM
British Library HMNTS - ELD Digital store - Ingest File:
- 8306.xml