When the boundaries are blurred: the significance of feminist methods in research

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    Abstract

    This article focuses on the ways that the author's somewhat in-between position as both an outsider/researcher and an insider/ex-political Iranian activist now in exile has contributed to the process of research on Iranian women exiles in the Netherlands and the United States. Feminist attention on life stories as a method, and feminist anthropologists' attention to particularity, involvement and reflexivity give the author the space, and inspire her, to explore the issue of positioning. This makes it possible for her to engage with the issues of home, identity and belonging, not only as a scholar but also as a woman in exile. In this way, the reflexivity resulting from this involvement enables her to reevaluate her own identity, sense of belonging, and life in exile, next to rethinking these essential themes within the social sciences on the theoretical level. The blurred boundary of the self and the other in her research has its moments of complication, but in the end, these complicated moments seem to be not only necessary but rewarding, in many ways. Copyright © 2005 SAGE Publications.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)363-375
    Number of pages13
    JournalEuropean Journal of Women's Studies
    Volume12
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2005

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