Ready to be Irritated? Sensitizing the Methods of Qualitative Intercultural Communication Research through Post-colonial Theory

In academic research on intercultural communication, imperfect translation of culturally shaped articulation is usually conceived of as a problem—be it in scientific settings or in everyday-life. The success of intercultural communication thus becomes the desired goal. Against the background of post...

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Main Author: Andrea Ploder
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: FQS 2009-01-01
Series:Forum: Qualitative Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/1232
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spelling doaj-785baf093d874ac2ba23a38892cc52ca2020-11-25T00:04:20ZdeuFQS Forum: Qualitative Social Research1438-56272009-01-011011182Ready to be Irritated? Sensitizing the Methods of Qualitative Intercultural Communication Research through Post-colonial TheoryAndrea Ploder0Karl-Franzens-Universität GrazIn academic research on intercultural communication, imperfect translation of culturally shaped articulation is usually conceived of as a problem—be it in scientific settings or in everyday-life. The success of intercultural communication thus becomes the desired goal. Against the background of post-colonial theory, the present contribution rests on the assumption that communicative irritation in the framework of qualitative research can be an expression of the research subjects' resistive potential to negotiate their identities beyond the limits of discursive attributes. The author holds that this potential can be transformed into a fruitful irritation of the scientific discourse itself. Based on these arguments, qualitative research is required to allow for the resistive potential of research subjects throughout the different stages of the research process. With reference to selected qualitative works, some strategies will be sketched to employ post-colonial ideas to qualitative research. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0901426http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/1232creative interventionidentityrepresentationpost-colonial theory
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Ploder
spellingShingle Andrea Ploder
Ready to be Irritated? Sensitizing the Methods of Qualitative Intercultural Communication Research through Post-colonial Theory
Forum: Qualitative Social Research
creative intervention
identity
representation
post-colonial theory
author_facet Andrea Ploder
author_sort Andrea Ploder
title Ready to be Irritated? Sensitizing the Methods of Qualitative Intercultural Communication Research through Post-colonial Theory
title_short Ready to be Irritated? Sensitizing the Methods of Qualitative Intercultural Communication Research through Post-colonial Theory
title_full Ready to be Irritated? Sensitizing the Methods of Qualitative Intercultural Communication Research through Post-colonial Theory
title_fullStr Ready to be Irritated? Sensitizing the Methods of Qualitative Intercultural Communication Research through Post-colonial Theory
title_full_unstemmed Ready to be Irritated? Sensitizing the Methods of Qualitative Intercultural Communication Research through Post-colonial Theory
title_sort ready to be irritated? sensitizing the methods of qualitative intercultural communication research through post-colonial theory
publisher FQS
series Forum: Qualitative Social Research
issn 1438-5627
publishDate 2009-01-01
description In academic research on intercultural communication, imperfect translation of culturally shaped articulation is usually conceived of as a problem—be it in scientific settings or in everyday-life. The success of intercultural communication thus becomes the desired goal. Against the background of post-colonial theory, the present contribution rests on the assumption that communicative irritation in the framework of qualitative research can be an expression of the research subjects' resistive potential to negotiate their identities beyond the limits of discursive attributes. The author holds that this potential can be transformed into a fruitful irritation of the scientific discourse itself. Based on these arguments, qualitative research is required to allow for the resistive potential of research subjects throughout the different stages of the research process. With reference to selected qualitative works, some strategies will be sketched to employ post-colonial ideas to qualitative research. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0901426
topic creative intervention
identity
representation
post-colonial theory
url http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/1232
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