Ellis, Adams and Bochner’s (2011)
article provides an extensive overview of autoethnography as one of the
qualitative methods in social research. It outlines the history of development
of this method, process, end product or an output, potential, issues and
criticisms. I thought the article was well written and could be a very useful
reference for those who are not familiar with this method.
I can see that autoethnography could be
one of few methods that I would be able to apply in L2 acquisition and ESL
teaching research. For example, being a language learner and writing about this
experience. Or in the case of ESL teaching, this experience would be
complemented with teaching and communication with other teachers, their
experiences and thoughts, and possibly students’ perspectives as well.
Having read this article, I kept on
pondering whether I would utilise this method in my research that tends to
address a wide range of issues, such as crises of identity among ethnic
minorities and marginalised groups of society, consequential effects of public
and social policies, including language policy, etc. If I wanted to do field
work somewhere, for example, in northern Iraq and carry out a research on
Kurds’ national identity and the way people feel about it being suppressed by
the former government of Saddam Hussein, how would I be able to experience what
those people had faced? My assumption is that being an ethnic Korean and a
Russian citizen, I would be treated in a different way, which will affect
(again, my assumption) the findings. Furthermore, the level of education,
cultural and religious beliefs, gender, sexual orientation and social class
might also affect this experience and treatment. This is just one of many
examples of the research that I could be carrying out, but how will it be
different to ethnography? And another reason why I would probably not use it is
because I simply lack confidence in my writing and ability to write the way
other authors do – in a very engaging and artistic way. I might be too
self-critical. And perhaps, to be a good writer, one needs to have at least
some sort of training, which I never had. All this makes any writing task quite
challenging especially if things have to be written in L2 or L3.
However, what I found interesting about
autoethnography (and I must acknowledge that I didn’t have a prior knowledge of
this method and hadn’t done any reading on it) is that it challenges canonical
ways of what research is, the way it should be conducted and how the findings
should be reported (Ellis et al., 2011). I remember when I did the Language
Learner paper, both assignments were supposed to have a conventional structure
that had been prescribed by both lecturers: introduction, literature review,
methodology, results, discussion and conclusion. And I clearly remember how I
felt about those prescriptive instructions – quite negative I must say –
because it was limiting and I felt I could approach this task in a different
way.
Another interesting finding from this
article is that unlike other methods, autoethnography acknowledges and
accommodates subjectivity, emotionality and the researcher’s influence. It does
not hide these matters like other methods tend to do and neither does it try to
assume that they do not exist (Ellis et al., 2011). The notions of objectivity,
absence of bias, validity and others are often considered as benchmarks of a
good research, especially in quantitative and some qualitative works.
Autoethnography, as implied by Ellis et al., 2011, challenges what social
research is and what to expect from both researchers (how it can be done) and
the audience (it can be much wider and also it can be urged to change their
attitudes and civic activity).
Although autoethnography may not be
suitable in all types of social research (in terms of the topics and issues
that one wishes to examine), looking at various methods and assessing their
suitability is a positive thing. It allows the researchers and academics look
outside the square, which is constituted by scientific paradigms, established
views, attitudes and whatnot. It can also help us approach issues in an
alternative way and who knows, maybe that’s where the answers are hidden.
Reference:
Ellis, C., Adams, T.E. & Bochner,
A.P. (2011). Autoethnography: An overview. Forum:
Qualitative social research. 12(1)
A nice discussion and summary Yulia - I think the issues you discuss regarding reflexivity and the acknowlegdeemnt of the particular biases of the research methods used (and the researcher) are important for ANY social research method.
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