Recent debates on situated knowledge highlight the issue of the researcher's position in the research process, challenging the traditional assumption of the insider/outsider dichotomy. Drawing on my fieldwork among Korean immigrant parents in an American school, I describe my shifting positions in negotiation and scrutinize the ways my reflexivity intersects with culture, power relations, and political ideologies in the research process. This self-analysis highlights partial and situated knowledge claims, questioning the author's value-neutral, authoritative voice in texts. I argue that the researcher should critically reflect on her location in the field and articulate how this position influences the research. © 2012: Minjung Lim and Nova Southeastern University.
CITATION STYLE
Lim, M. (2012). Being a Korean studying Koreans in an American school: Reflections on culture, power, and ideology. Qualitative Report, 17(9). https://doi.org/10.46743/2160-3715/2012.1803
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