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Borders and margins: debates on intersectionality for critical research

Ilana Mountian (Department of Psychology, Universidade de São Paulo (CAPES/PNPD), São Paulo, Brazil)

Qualitative Research Journal

ISSN: 1443-9883

Article publication date: 14 August 2017

453

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to debate intersectionality as a key methodological aspect for critical research. While intersectionality is a consensus for critical studies, it is important to highlight the challenges that a perspective that consider power relations across social categories put forward. For this, I examine how these relations are seen in research, and highlight the risks of hierarchical views on social categories, or the invisibilization of those same categories.

Design/methodology/approach

These reflections will be primarily based on previous research on immigration in São Paulo and on older transsexual women in Brazil, studies that required a multi-faceted analysis. The studies were based on critical feminist, post-colonial studies and psychoanalysis to examine discourses and to unravel the social imaginaries on the immigrant and on transsexual women in Brazil. For this, I bring forth the notion of the other as a discursive space often placed on these groups, and how the discursive position also reflect views on gender, race, sexuality and class as structural discursive boundaries in Brazil.

Findings

Taking the border as a metaphor to read everyday encounters, the body becomes a mark of difference, where subjects are placed at specific discursive (and also geographical) positions – at the center or at the margins. Taking this into account, the paper highlights two main aspects: first, a debate on the importance of intersectionality for critical methodological frameworks, and second, how critical discourse analysis allow us to defy the taken-for-granted binary constructions of other-us, that are continuously re-evoked and reified in discourse.

Originality/value

This debate is important as there are innumerous ways of approaching intersectionality, hence a critical analysis into current debates and methodological standpoints become central.

Keywords

Citation

Mountian, I. (2017), "Borders and margins: debates on intersectionality for critical research", Qualitative Research Journal, Vol. 17 No. 3, pp. 155-163. https://doi.org/10.1108/QRJ-11-2016-0071

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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