Engagement beyond critique? Anthropological perspectives on participation and community

Gritt B. Nielsen, Nanna Jordt Jørgensen

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftsartikelForskningpeer review

Abstract

In response to the ideals of cultural critique, complexity and moral relativism promoted in 1980s postmodern anthropology, different attempts have been made in recent decades to make anthropology more ‘engaged’ in the promotion of social change. In this article, we focus on three contemporary positions on anthropological engagement: policy-oriented activist research, feminist inspired collaborative research, and what we have chosen to call research for alterity and alternatives. Each of these approaches highlights certain ideas of participation and thereby conjure up particular kinds of communities to work with and through. We discuss the value and limitations of the three positions on engagement and argue that, in all its diversity, anthropological participatory research can play an important role in co-creating platforms for resistance and protest against various forms of domination and oppression while simultaneously contributing to preparing the ground for alternative imaginations, desires and ways of living.

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