Research Stories: Opportunities and Obstacles for Social Scientists

Authors: Lim, H.

Conference: University of Nottingham 3rd Enquire Conference

Dates: 20 July 2011

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/21562/

Source: Manual

Preferred by: Hyun-Joo Lim

Research Stories: Opportunities and Obstacles for Social Scientists

Authors: Lim, H.

Conference: University of Nottingham 3rd Enquire Conference

Abstract:

This paper aims to highlight how the life history interview has opened up possibilities for effectively exploring interlaced and shifting identities of marginalised groups, such as ethnic minority women, by illustrating two life stories of first generation Korean mothers in Britain. Chamberlayne, Bornat and Wengraf (2000) maintained that in order to understand an individual more fully, we need to know her life history and the processes in which she becomes what she is. While certain elements of identity might be more stable than others, it is important to recognise that individual identity changes over time in line with the vicissitudes of individual life history. Also, the identity of the individual is a result of a complex, multifarious and dynamic interaction between different social organisations and relations at different times and spaces (Valentine, 2007). In this respect, the life history method provides ‘considerable background and social texture to research’ (Berg, 2007, p. 277). In order to illuminate this, the paper examines two case studies of Korean mothers, selected from the author’s wider research of 30 life history interviews with East Asian mothers in Britain. These two life stories of first generation Korean mothers in Britain revealed that the identity construction of the respective ethnic minority women with dependent children is dynamic, as a result of the interplay between divergent social relations, such as motherhood and migration, in different social contexts. Alongside this, the biographical approach enabled me to explore the varied experiences of ethnic minority women who might appear to share similar positions in society. Drawing on these life history interviews, this paper argues that the life history technique is an extremely valuable research tool that enables us to fathom the formation of an individual woman’s identity in a fuller and richer sense, whilst also highlighting individual differences in their experiences of being ethnic minority mothers in Britain.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/21562/

Source: BURO EPrints