Vulnerability, Emotions, and Trauma

 

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Estrella, A. (2019). “El Cruce de la Muerte: Fieldwork and Carework at the Crossroad of Death.” Anthrodendum (blog). November 7. [Link

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Hage, G. (2009). “Hating Israel in the Field On Ethnography and Political Emotions.” Anthropological Theory 9(1): 59–79. [Link

Hedström, J., & Phyo, Z. M. (2020). “Friendship, Intimacy, and Power in Research on Conflict: Implications for Feminist Ethics.” International Feminist Journal of Politics, 22(5), 765–777. [Link

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McClinton Appollis, T., Lund, C., de Vries, P. J., & Mathews, C. (2015). “Adolescents’ and Adults’ Experiences of Being Surveyed About Violence and Abuse: A Systematic Review of Harms, Benefits, and Regrets.” American Journal of Public Health105(2), e31–e45. [Link]  

Moghnieh, L. (2017). “‘The Violence We Live In’: Reading and Experiencing Violence in the Field.” Contemporary Levant, 2(1), 24–36. [Link]

Nassif, H. (2017). “To Fear and to Defy: Emotions in the Field.” Contemporary Levant, 2(1), 49–54. [Link]

Palmer, J. (2015). “Vicarious Trauma among Researchers: Recognizing and Dealing with It.” UAA Justice Center (blog). February 24. [Link

Pearce, R. (2020). “A Methodology for the Marginalised: Surviving Oppression and Traumatic Fieldwork in the Neoliberal Academy.” Sociology, 54(4), 806–824. [PDF

Pearlman, W. (2022). “Emotional Sensibility: Exploring the Methodological and Ethical Implications of Research Participants’ Emotions.” American Political Science Review, 1–14. [Link]

Porterfield, K. (2019). “Working with a Traumatized Child: Creating a Frame and Minimizing Harm.” Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma. November 19. [Link

Robins, J. (2021). Can Historians Be Traumatized by History? The New Republic. February 16. [Link]

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Thomson, S.M., Ansoms, A., and Murison, J. (2013). Emotional and Ethical Challenges for Field Research in Africa—The Story Behind the Findings. Palgrave Macmillan. [Link]  

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