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Duo-ethnographic Methods: A Feminist Take on Collaborative Research

Duo-ethnography is a collaborative methodology in which participants juxtapose their experiences around a topic to parse multiple perspectives. It explicitly positions ethnographers as sources of information, not data collectors. This method has been used to explore racial identities, class dynamics...

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Published in:Field methods 2023-11, Vol.35 (4), p.409-413
Main Authors: Hardin, Jessica, Saldaña-Tejeda, Abril, Gálvez, Alyshia, Yates-Doerr, Emily, Garth, Hanna, Dickinson, Maggie, Carney, Megan, Valdez, Natali
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c334t-86c2f74bed4a85bf7b6d7331e21b845bb83a672e10629b5f96052ef5f9e9a6df3
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container_end_page 413
container_issue 4
container_start_page 409
container_title Field methods
container_volume 35
creator Hardin, Jessica
Saldaña-Tejeda, Abril
Gálvez, Alyshia
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Dickinson, Maggie
Carney, Megan
Valdez, Natali
description Duo-ethnography is a collaborative methodology in which participants juxtapose their experiences around a topic to parse multiple perspectives. It explicitly positions ethnographers as sources of information, not data collectors. This method has been used to explore racial identities, class dynamics, decolonizing pedagogies, and gender in academic life. Building on previous work, we consider our contribution to be articulating duo-ethnography as an explicitly feminist methodology that allows for mutual exploration of difference as well as reciprocal care and support. As part of a larger collaboration, we used duo-ethnography to create explicit dialog spaces during the COVID-19 pandemic to talk about differences in our experiences related to sexuality, race, class, tenure position, and seniority. Duo-ethnography is one method we used to challenge junior/senior relations and transform how we related to one another.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/1525822X231158894
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source ERIC; Sociological Abstracts; SAGE
subjects Collaboration
Cooperation
COVID-19
Decolonization
Ethnography
Feminism
Individual Differences
Information sources
Racial differences
Seniority
Sexuality
title Duo-ethnographic Methods: A Feminist Take on Collaborative Research
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