Oliveira-Lisboa2017

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Oliveira-Lisboa2017
BibType ARTICLE
Key Oliveira-Lisboa2017
Author(s) Maria do Carmo Leite de Oliveira, Carla Mirelle de Oliveira Matos Lisboa
Title Narratives about displacement and stigmatization of identities
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Discourse analysis, Stigma, Membership Categorization Analysis, Narratives, Identity
Publisher
Year 2017
Language
City
Month
Journal Russian Journal of Linguistics
Volume 21
Number 2
Pages 320-334
URL
DOI 10.22363/231291822017212320334 NARR
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

The displacement of people who leave their home to live in the streets is one of the social dramas commonly found in large urban areas. Despite forming a heterogeneous population group, these people are seen by society as one homogenous crowd, grouped together based on the generalizations of negative categorizations attributed to them. This article analyzes the displacement storytelling of a woman who lost her house to heavy rainstorms, which forced her to go live in the streets with her seven youngest children. Based on the concepts of membership categorization analysis, stigma and talking back, we aim to investigate how this former street dweller refutes the stigmatized identities that she knows are attributed to her, as well as how she claims an alternative identity. Her narrative was produced in the context of an interview for research on life stories. The results show that the storyteller seeks to build a coherent narrative for her own self by adopting a belief system to organize her life story and by providing explanations to the events in her life. Accordingly, she blames the street dwellers’ deviant behavior on the street environment, and also claims her status as a member of the “family” collection by invoking the dominant discourse on motherhood as an ideal of female fulfillment. Ultimately, this study highlights the importance of knowing the native categories, that is, the categories created by the members of the group whose actions are being studied, which challenge the categories conceived by outsiders.

Notes