Researcher positionality in linguistics: Lessons from undergraduate experiences in community‐centered collaborative research

Author:

Bucholtz Mary1ORCID,Campbell Eric W.1ORCID,Cevallos Teresa1,Cruz Veronica1,Fawcett Alexia Z.1ORCID,Guerrero Bethany1,Lydon Katie1,Mendoza Inî G.2ORCID,Peters Simon L.1ORCID,Reyes Basurto Griselda3

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Santa Barbara CA Santa Barbara USA

2. University of Chicago IL Chicago USA

3. Mixteco/Indígena Community Organizing Project and University of California, Santa Barbara CA Santa Barbara USA

Abstract

AbstractResearcher positionality has come into focus in a number of fields, as scholars increasingly acknowledge the impact of their lived experiences and identities on all aspects of the research process. In most areas of linguistics, however, researcher positionality remains underdiscussed, even as many linguists from dominant groups conduct research on the language of subordinated groups without community self‐determination regarding the research direction and goals. While the growing emphasis on collaborative community‐centered research overcomes some inequities, another key step toward a more inclusive linguistics is the involvement of undergraduate researchers who are members of the partner community or whose backgrounds, experiences, and identities overlap with those of community members. Such undergraduate team members can contribute special insight and knowledge to the research. This article describes the role of a mostly Latinx team of undergraduate research interns in a community language maintenance survey project as part of a collaboration between a Hispanic Serving Institution and a nonprofit organization supporting the Mexican Indigenous community on California’s Central Coast. Undergraduate interns strengthened the project by drawing connections between their own linguistic experiences and those of the survey respondents, thus enabling the research team to better support community goals. The article concludes with recommendations for centering researcher positionality in linguistics in order to produce more inclusive, just, and rigorous linguistic science.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Linguistics and Language

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