Deliberate Perspectival Obstructions: Looking at Nothing in Papua New Guinea

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

  • Henrik Hvenegaard Mikkelsen
  • Anders Emil Rasmussen
This article discusses the collaborative use of what the authors call ‘perspectival obstructions’. Taking its outset in the events revolving around a series of challenges given to each other, as well as to their interlocutors, in Papua New Guinea, the article unfolds how obstructions may be tied to a radical shift in perspective that allows partly for the invisible and absent to emerge as visible and present, and for different potentialities of persons and social relations to be brought to light. Hence the article demonstrates how obstruction and intervention as parts of the ethnographic methodology may help elicit perspectives that are otherwise kept hidden (deliberately or not), such as power-relations or the occluded side of a friendship or a kinship relation. This, in turn, also poses a danger to the otherwise collaborative ideal of modern ethnographic fieldwork in literally challenging and affecting ‘the natives' point of view’.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftEthnos
Vol/bind82
Udgave nummer5
Sider (fra-til)867-885
Antal sider19
ISSN0014-1844
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2017

ID: 120833181