Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 April 2009
Kathleen B. Jones, in her now famous essay about women-friendlypolities, explains that that citizenship must be redefined toinclude a body that does not “easily fit military-corporateuniforms” (1990, 794). Jones calls theorists to recognize women's“embodied lives,” and in doing so, considers how “women's bodies areproblematic” and “sex/gendered identity affects … life” (786). Weargue here that recognizing women's embodied lives is similarlyimportant to a discussion of gender and fieldwork. As researchers inthe field, we have been defined by our social position as women,thus putting us at distinct disadvantages and advantages (Sundberg2003).