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‘Ghost in the Shell’: Reflections on Fieldwork in Kazakhstan
Authors:Julia Khan
Institution:1. leel-han@yandex.ru
Abstract:After independence from the Soviet Union, Kazakhstan proclaimed Kazakhs the title ethnic group, and the Kazakh language the national language. This deprived the Russian-speaking population of its former dominant social position. Being a Russian-speaking citizen of Kazakhstan, the daughter of a half-Korean half-Russian father and a half-Kazakh half-German mother, I did my field work as a presumed ‘native’ anthropologist at Kazakhstan State University with linguistically divided groups of students. The relations between the field and the researcher disclosed different geopolitical realities of knowledge production and challenged the legacy of relativist methodology. I reflect on this experience and examine different conceptualisations of the native positionality in the post-Soviet context. Reflections in this paper raise new questions about nation-building in post-socialist states and about ‘nativeness’ itself, and contribute to the criticism of postmodern theory.
Keywords:Native Anthropology  Methodology  Nation-Building  Discursive Practice  Reflexivity  Kazakhstan  Knowledge Production  Authenticity
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