Gayle A. Juneau’s research while affiliated with University of West Florida and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Authoring Social Responsibility
  • Article

December 2002

·

10 Reads

·

1 Citation

Qualitative Inquiry

Janet K. Pilcher

·

Gayle A. Juneau

To better understand how researchers author social responsibility, the authors closely examined the “privileged” language in Mitchell Duneier’s and Carol Stack’s ethnographic texts and the ways that they transformed their positions without decentering the voices of those living in poor communities. The authors then describe how these texts consider a new ethnographic sensibility for economic injustice that forces ethnographers to assume responsibilities for intersecting social class with all other oppressive structures. This ethnographic sensibility involves ethnographers writing texts that broaden and transform standpoints of economically privileged persons living and working in our local communities. That is, when ethnographers position their texts from a social class standpoint, they automatically change the dimensions of how individuals interrupt and explain race, gender, and other social injustices. The authors propose that to better understand hierarchical structures that dominate society in today’s world, ethnographers must responsibly position their texts from this standpoint. Specifically, the language of the text visibly indicates the ethnographers understood (a) that they entered a field to work with their participants to transform public consciousness, (b) how to participate in an environment where people live on the social sidelines, and (c) their responsibility in writing a reflexive text from an antihegemonic standpoint that identifies the strengths and struggles of the participants.

Citations (1)


... Feminist, critical and postmodern discourses of social science suggest that research should expose or problematise iniquitous social structures and asymmetric power relations (cf. Fine et al., 2000;Pilcher and Juneau, 2002;Denzin and Lincoln, 2005b). At the very least, ethnographers and other social scientists should avoid exploiting people and undermining their positions in society. ...

Reference:

Ethnography, Ethnographers and Hospitality Research: Communities, Tensions and Affiliations
Authoring Social Responsibility
  • Citing Article
  • December 2002

Qualitative Inquiry