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“We Thought You Would Be White”: Race and Gender inFieldwork

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2009

Frances B. Henderson
Affiliation:
Maryville College

Extract

After an exhausting 22-hour trip from St. Louis, I landed in Maputo,Mozambique, alone, for the first time in July 2003 to begin mydissertation research on women and women's organizations inMozambique since democratization. I spent an hour talking to a youngman who was returning home (to Maputo) from Brazil. Seeing it as anopportunity to practice my Portuguese with someone who spokeEnglish, I did not realize that an hour had passed and my “welcomingparty” still had not arrived. The young man and I switched fromPortuguese to English as he began telling me the “cool places tohang out and get a drink” in Maputo. I had no idea who was coming topick me up as I was armed only with the information that it was myin-country advisor's brother who would be there. As this young manand I were talking someone came up to me and asked, “Are youFrances?” With a sigh of relief, I said yes, and he replied, “I washere all of the time and I did not realize that you were here untilI heard you speaking English with this young man. I did notrecognize you; we thought you would be white.”

Type
Symposium
Copyright
Copyright © The American Political Science Association 2009

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