Forum: Qualitative Social Research (May 2019)

Participation as Entangled Self Assertion

  • Meagan Call-Cummings,
  • Barbara Dennis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17169/fqs-20.2.3203
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 2

Abstract

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In this article, we explore the concept of participation, tracing the history of how participation has been understood and used in ethnographic and critical participatory action research methodological traditions. Within this exploration we push on the limits and boundaries of our ordinary conceptions of "participation," presenting and working through scenarios from our fieldwork in which we took for granted an ordinary concept of participation. As we work through these scenarios we encounter participation first as rebellion, then as resistance, and finally as entangled self-assertion, as opportunities for establishing one's dignity and worthwhileness in an institutional context that diminishes or denies recognition of one's dignity and worthwhileness. This notion of participation as a mode of self-dignity speaks back to the way in which knowledge is not neutral for self and is not separate of self.

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