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  • For this article, I have drawn from a project "Looking at Our Own History Book: Exploring Through the Stories of Aboriginal Women the Relationship Between Shame and the Problems with Alcohol", which I undertook in partnership with Aboriginal Australian counsellors, community workers, and women with whom they had worked. I conducted my research in urban and regional areas of Victoria, Australia from 2014-2017. In the article, I describe how listening to the women's first-hand accounts of practices associated with settler-colonisation impacted me, as researcher - both emotionally and in terms of my professional and social identity - and how the telling of their stories, particularly in relation to the concept of "shame", impacted how the women saw themselves. Approaching the research process as a shared act of becoming, the article adds to our understanding of how self-conscious emotions such as shame contribute to the problems researchers working in the area investigate, and provides a different approach to how they might best be addressed. (xsd:string)
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  • 2022 (xsd:gyear)
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  • 2022 (xsd:gyear)
?:doi
  • 10.17169/fqs-23.1.3858 ()
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  • en (xsd:string)
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  • 1438-5627 ()
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  • 1 (xsd:string)
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  • The Ethnographer Unbared: Looking at My Own History Book (xsd:string)
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  • Zeitschriftenartikel (xsd:string)
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  • GESIS-SSOAR (xsd:string)
  • In: Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 23, 2022, 1 (xsd:string)
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  • 23 (xsd:string)