From land to sea: unsettling subjectivities
In this paper I trace an important conceptual shift
which emerged during my fieldwork with fishermen in the South West of
Ireland. I begin by describing how my role as a social researcher was
interpreted as a valuable ‘bridge’ between different (epistemological)
positions, namely the fishermen and scientists. This approach rests on
the belief that individual actors occupy discrete subject-positions
capable of being articulated and understood within consensus-making
processes. Going to sea marked, for me, a literal and metaphorical
departure from this understanding. Rather than thinking of fishermen as
bounded, individual subjects acting on and in a ‘dumb’ external world,
and thus having a ‘position’ from which to make themselves understood, I
began to attend to experiences which extended across and between
people, places and things. In part two I analyze how the concept of
‘continuous experience’ helps us to think about experience as relational
and contingent, unsettling the (governing) call to identify one’s
position. Attending to the ways in which experience unfolds through the
immediate mattering of relations between people, places and things also
allows us to move beyond explanatory modes which seek to identify how
subjects are produced through particular structuring relations. In the
final part of the paper I describe how the excess of sociability can
suspend normal roles and relations, including those which exist between
‘researcher’ and ‘subject’.
From land to sea: unsettling subjectivities.
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From land to sea: unsettling subjectivities.
Autori:
Patrick
Bresnihan
[1]
[1]
Trinity College Dublin
Rezumat
In this paper I trace an important conceptual shift
which emerged during my fieldwork with fishermen in the South West of
Ireland. I begin by describing how my role as a social researcher was
interpreted as a valuable ‘bridge’ between different (epistemological)
positions, namely the fishermen and scientists. This approach rests on
the belief that individual actors occupy discrete subject-positions
capable of being articulated and understood within consensus-making
processes. Going to sea marked, for me, a literal and metaphorical
departure from this understanding. Rather than thinking of fishermen as
bounded, individual subjects acting on and in a ‘dumb’ external world,
and thus having a ‘position’ from which to make themselves understood, I
began to attend to experiences which extended across and between
people, places and things. In part two I analyze how the concept of
‘continuous experience’ helps us to think about experience as relational
and contingent, unsettling the (governing) call to identify one’s
position. Attending to the ways in which experience unfolds through the
immediate mattering of relations between people, places and things also
allows us to move beyond explanatory modes which seek to identify how
subjects are produced through particular structuring relations. In the
final part of the paper I describe how the excess of sociability can
suspend normal roles and relations, including those which exist between
‘researcher’ and ‘subject’.
Cuvinte cheie:
Experience, subjectivity, representation, materiality
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