How Do You Like Me Now?: Exploring Subjectivities and Home/Field Boundaries in Research with Women in Sex Work

Auteurs-es

  • Susan Dewey
  • Treena Orchard

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.3138/anth.582.A01

Mots-clés :

travail du sexe, subjectivité, anthropologie à domicile, relations chercheur-participants, ethnographie féministe

Résumé

Les analyses anthropologiques qui étudient les relations ambigües entre chercheur et participants, et ce, dans des lieux qui s'avèrent être aussi le domicile du chercheur, tendent à porter davantage sur l'expérience de l'anthropologue, que sur la manière dont les participants construisent leur propre subjectivité dans ces terrains fluides. À partir de vignettes ethnographiques – basées sur notre recherche de terrain auprès de travailleuses du sexe dans les quartiers et les sites de prestation de services où nous vivons et travaillons – cet article présente le concept de « travail subjectif » pour explorer comment nous reconfigurons, aux côtés de participants, nos relations et les frontières mouvantes du terrain.

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Comment citer

Dewey, . S., & Orchard, T. (2017). How Do You Like Me Now?: Exploring Subjectivities and Home/Field Boundaries in Research with Women in Sex Work. Anthropologica, 58(2), 250–263. https://doi.org/10.3138/anth.582.A01