Journal of Refugee Studies
Volume 20, Issue 2, 2007, Pages 248-264

Stories as lived experience: Narratives in forced migration research (Article)

Eastmond M.
  • a Department of Social Anthropology, School of Global Studies, University of Göteborg, PO Box 700, SE 405 30 Göteborg, Sweden, Nordic School of Public Health, Goteborg, Sweden

Abstract

Stories are part of everyday life and constitute means for actors to express and negotiate experience. For researchers, they provide a site to examine the meanings people, individually or collectively, ascribe to lived experience. Narratives are not transparent renditions of 'truth' but reflect a dynamic interplay between life, experience and story. Placed in their wider socio-political and cultural contexts, stories can provide insights into how forced migrants seek to make sense of displacement and violence, re-establish identity in ruptured life courses and communities, or bear witness to violence and repression. The researcher must pay particular attention to his/her own role in the production of narrative data and the representation of lived experience as text. © The Author [2007].

Author Keywords

Methods Lived experience Forced migration Narratives

Index Keywords

forced migration research

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-34547873141&doi=10.1093%2fjrs%2ffem007&partnerID=40&md5=572a5193df53b3fe94d8d43f171b55d4

DOI: 10.1093/jrs/fem007
ISSN: 09516328
Cited by: 180
Original Language: English