Enhancing Intersectional Analyses with Polyvocality: Making and Illustrating the Model
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Developments in Intersectionality Theory, Method and Applications
2. Questioning Scholarly Authority: Postmodern Questions and Polyvocal Replies
Have ethnographic authority and the burden of authorship figured differently in the works of women anthropologists? What is the cultural logic by which authorship is coded as “feminine” or “masculine”, and what are the consequences of those makings? What kind of writing is possible for feminist anthropologists now, if to write unconventionally puts a woman in the category of untrained wife, while writing according to the conventions of the academy situates her as textual conservative?
2.1. Multiple Voices through “Emic” and “Etic” Perspectives
2.2. Interweaving Polyvocality with Intersectionality
3. Polyvocal Scaled Intersectionality: Applying Our Model to an Empirical Case
3.1. Ethnographic Case from Malaysia and Singapore: Doreen Hemmy1
3.1.1. Doreen’s (Emic) Perspective
I am Eurasian. My mother is Chinese. My father had a Dutch father and a Sri Lankan mother; she was a Tamil. In Malaysia, the society is segregated into Chinese, Malays, Indians and Others. I am officially classified as Others. So…in Malaysia, I don’t have any race! I’m just Others! (…) But, culturally speaking, I’m practicing mostly Chinese cultural elements, so there is no need to adjust in Singapore [where Chinese are a demographic cultural majority]. In my family, the most important elements are the Chinese and Christian. All my close relatives are Christians. Christmas and Chinese New Year are the two biggest festivities in my family.
I have no idea about the Netherlands or Sri Lanka, I don’t know what kind of Dutch or Sri Lankan cultural elements could have been part of my life! I don’t have any connections to such elements. I mean, I really don’t have any race! I have the feeling that I do not belong to anything. The Chinese part is most important for me since I have a very strong relation to my mother’s family. But I don’t even look Chinese. Actually I think that this is a reason why I like postcolonial literature. Because postcolonial theories deal with people living between boundaries and at the margins of society; it’s about how they cross spaces and how hybrid identities are created. This crossing of boundaries and identities, the hybridity… I find this within myself. Postcolonialism is very much about myself and how I live in spaces ‘in-between.’
It is okay being in Singapore. Actually, this is not an important question for me. I neither feel disadvantaged nor preferred. I myself, here in Singapore, I feel most comfortable with people who speak English [her mother tongue]. Being or not being Chinese is not that important. My life in Singapore made me be so used to the English language. I even increasingly approach people in Malaysia using English and not Malay.
From this interview, then, Doreen expresses something of a return to a stronger KL identification than before.I want to change my group in church. I don’t supervise my girls’ group anymore because they should lead their group now by themselves. I want to participate in a Church group where Malay is spoken. I can practice my Malay then and that [Malay-speaking] group needs some support.
3.1.2. Doreen’s Parents’ Perspectives (Family Etic)
I think basically all this [education-related issues] is a question of opportunities. Because, if you are a non-Malay [like Doreen], you don’t have so many opportunities. So a lot of the business community, they have more opportunities in Singapore. So who are the brains in Singapore? I think the education system in Singapore is open, where people have opportunities. I remember when Doreen was in her first year, she found the education exciting. Because here [in Malaysia], the standard has to be lower because of the Malays. So she always felt that she could obtain more there because of the education system. [Here in Kuala Lumpur] they lower the standard because of the Malays.
3.1.3. Researcher’s Etic Perspective
Yes, education is like the most important thing. Even my mother, she... because her parents were from China. [They were] very old-fashioned, and they didn’t believe in sending the daughters to school. So my mother is about 82 years-old now and she never went to school. But she knew the value of education. So she always would tell us, you know, ‘I can give you money but there is no use [in that]. The best thing I can give you is education.’ So this is the same thing that we... this kind of value that we also have and pass to our children.
4. Materials and Methods
For over three decades, qualitative scholars have debated issues of voice, authority, and knowledge production. We do not anticipate settling these deliberations with this article and its approach. We do hope, however, that research including polyvocality will solve some of the problems identified to this point. Nonetheless, we also recognize that such research involves important trade-offs—trade-offs that affect our work here as well. That is, we did not conduct our research with polyvocality built into the research design. We arrived at the necessity of bringing in multiple perspectives as part of our ever-evolving collaborative work to improve upon an already exceptional framework—intersectionality. Thus, we readily admit that our article shortchanges the “emic” (ego) and “family etic” perspectives because we did not elicit these during the original research for this article. To be sure, Thimm did interview family members of her principal informants. What she did not do is interview these family members expressly to collect the views of the key informants. She collected data that ex post facto has been marshalled for this purpose. Obviously, that is not ideal and is a definite limitation. We also recognize that conducting full-fledged polyvocal research augments typical qualitative work and therefore likely further diminishes the (already small) sample size of the research. However, if validity is the primary goal this trade-off is can be substantiated.Deciding how to present voices and lives is a continuous problem for qualitative writers. Because we use the voices and experiences of the people we study, both for their own sake and as evidence of our credibility, we are constantly making writerly decisions about who gets to say what and how often in the text, and who the narrator talks about, how and how often.
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Research Ethics
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Thimm, V.; Chaudhuri, M.; Mahler, S.J. Enhancing Intersectional Analyses with Polyvocality: Making and Illustrating the Model. Soc. Sci. 2017, 6, 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci6020037
Thimm V, Chaudhuri M, Mahler SJ. Enhancing Intersectional Analyses with Polyvocality: Making and Illustrating the Model. Social Sciences. 2017; 6(2):37. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci6020037
Chicago/Turabian StyleThimm, Viola, Mayurakshi Chaudhuri, and Sarah J. Mahler. 2017. "Enhancing Intersectional Analyses with Polyvocality: Making and Illustrating the Model" Social Sciences 6, no. 2: 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci6020037
APA StyleThimm, V., Chaudhuri, M., & Mahler, S. J. (2017). Enhancing Intersectional Analyses with Polyvocality: Making and Illustrating the Model. Social Sciences, 6(2), 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci6020037