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39 Postcolonial Positionality

  • Rishika Mukhopadhyay
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Abstract

This chapter unpacks the politics of fieldwork enacted by Global South researchers working in Northern institutions, who find themselves within a web of colonial power relations between the local and the global, field and home. Questioning the division between home and field, they have reflected on the micropolitics of navigating between these two spaces. Straddling between multiple body politics and geopolitics of knowledge production – across the scale of the neighborhood and the colonial metropole, scholars have argued against the dualistic binary of insider-outsider and self-other. I focus on those unspoken politics that give the postcolonial researcher a double insider status. From being a daughter embedded in the neighborhood’s moral code to responding to the colonial residue of the field, the chapter illustrates how these conflicting positionalities are harnessed in the fieldwork producing nuanced emplaced knowledge. It suggests that fieldwork politics for a female postcolonial researcher materializes through her perceived embeddedness and mobile locatedness in multiple scales often creating conditions for her to come closer to the field.

Abstract

This chapter unpacks the politics of fieldwork enacted by Global South researchers working in Northern institutions, who find themselves within a web of colonial power relations between the local and the global, field and home. Questioning the division between home and field, they have reflected on the micropolitics of navigating between these two spaces. Straddling between multiple body politics and geopolitics of knowledge production – across the scale of the neighborhood and the colonial metropole, scholars have argued against the dualistic binary of insider-outsider and self-other. I focus on those unspoken politics that give the postcolonial researcher a double insider status. From being a daughter embedded in the neighborhood’s moral code to responding to the colonial residue of the field, the chapter illustrates how these conflicting positionalities are harnessed in the fieldwork producing nuanced emplaced knowledge. It suggests that fieldwork politics for a female postcolonial researcher materializes through her perceived embeddedness and mobile locatedness in multiple scales often creating conditions for her to come closer to the field.

Heruntergeladen am 11.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111289274-040/html?lang=de
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