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Writing and exhibiting a ‘live’ and convivial sociology: Portraiture and women’s lived experiences of a French suburb
Embracing the manifesto for a ‘live’ sociology, I included portraiture into the research design of an ethnographic study into women’s lived experiences of French suburbia and organised an exhibition entitled Habitantes d’Hier and d’Aujourd’hui: exposition sociologique et photographique. This was a p...
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Published in: | The Sociological review (Keele) 2021-11, Vol.69 (6), p.1195-1213 |
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description | Embracing the manifesto for a ‘live’ sociology, I included portraiture into the research design of an ethnographic study into women’s lived experiences of French suburbia and organised an exhibition entitled Habitantes d’Hier and d’Aujourd’hui: exposition sociologique et photographique. This was a personal project in the neighbourhood of my youth and was motivated by the intention to shine some light on the invisible stories of women living in lower-middle and middle-income suburbs in France. In this article, I reflect on the use of portraiture for the possibility it offers in capturing the ethnographic encounter as well as in giving saliency and offering a visual representation of the sociological analysis. I also discuss the exhibition of these portraits as a moment of conviviality grounded in the endeavour of writing differently from hegemonic modes of academic communication and dissemination allowing for a sharing and sharpening of the sociological imagination. It represents an opportunity to think beyond some of the more neoliberal imperatives that govern academia today and shape our sociological craft. I argue for the value of creating a moment of conviviality, that is a space challenging modes of dissemination, engagement and even impact to some extent, as well as modes of knowledge production: broadly opening up more possibilities for a truly public sociology to continue to exist. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/00380261211009775 |
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source | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Sociological Abstracts; SAGE |
subjects | Dissemination Ethnography Hegemony Low income groups Modes of production Neighborhoods Neoliberalism Portraits Research design Sociological imagination Sociology Suburban areas Visual representation Women |
title | Writing and exhibiting a ‘live’ and convivial sociology: Portraiture and women’s lived experiences of a French suburb |
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