“Wi, se kretyènn mwen ye” (Yes I am Christian)

Methodological Falsehood in Fieldwork

Authors

  • Nadège Mézié ParisV-René Descartes

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/firn.v5i2.180

Keywords:

evangelical, fieldwork, methodological falsehood, participant observation, required identities, strategies, tools

Abstract

During a field study of a year and a half in the Haitian mountains, I was forced to re-evaluate my research strategy, and consequently the object of my study, after a setback that denied me access to the American evangelical mission, which I had hoped to study from within. This failure to integrate as a non-Protestant researcher, led me to adopt a methodological falsehood to allow me to penetrate the Haitian evangelical mission. The researcher who chooses methodological falsehood has to fashion a passing and superficial redefinition of her appearance, beliefs and practices, and live her new religious identity according to the prevalent beliefs and norms. This paper will focus on the fieldworker’s daily performance in her role of “Christian woman,” and the strategies put in place to respond to the prescriptive criteria of the role being played.

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Author Biography

  • Nadège Mézié, ParisV-René Descartes

    Nadège Mézié is a PhD student in anthropology at the University Paris Descartes. She chose Haiti as her fieldwork site. She stayed there two years studying the verbal interactions in the evangelical community.

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Published

2011-07-14

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Mézié, N. (2011). “Wi, se kretyènn mwen ye” (Yes I am Christian): Methodological Falsehood in Fieldwork. Fieldwork in Religion, 5(2), 180-192. https://doi.org/10.1558/firn.v5i2.180