Telling Tales on Neighbors: Ethics in Two Voices
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Spring 2009
Abstract
Focusing on the ethics of writing about others in ethnographic and autoethnographic tales, this article provides excerpts from stories about neighbors in a mountain community that show differences and conflicts about religion, gender, ethnicity, and race. The author provides a dialogic representation of the debates that occurred in her mind about the process and ethics of writing these stories. These introspective conversations reveal the vulnerable, muddy, and ambivalent process of making ethical decisions in qualitative research. These complex decisions require integrating our own moral positions with society's call for scholarship that contributes to social justice; readers' demands for truthful and multifaceted accounts; and research participants' and characters' desire for privacy, positive representation, and control over the stories of their lives. The author encourages open dialogue about the ethical quandaries experienced in doing qualitative research.
Was this content written or created while at USF?
Yes
Citation / Publisher Attribution
International Review of Qualitative Research, v. 2, issue 1, p. 3-27
Scholar Commons Citation
Ellis, Carolyn, "Telling Tales on Neighbors: Ethics in Two Voices" (2009). Communication Faculty Publications. 252.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/spe_facpub/252