Imo Kaufman
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Safety and silence
Oral history, far right research, and the paradox of the ‘vocal minority’
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This chapter explores the tension between safety and good qualitative research practice in oral history interviews; interviews which seek to uncover far-right machinations in UK gaming spaces without talking to members of the far right, or far-right adjacent groups, themselves. Through a close examination of interview excerpts, in which four interview participants independently referred to a toxic, othered ‘vocal minority’ in gaming spaces, I will explore how the far right can linger in interview data without actually being present. This examination is reflexive, as I consider the specific implications of my own positionality and experiences of gaming space as a Jewish researcher. By scrutinising my own positionality, my paradoxical research practice (investigating a community without talking to them) and how far-right ideologies operate, I will unpack the ideological knots that my research has become tangled up within. Using an excerpt from a Louis Theroux documentary, in which he visits Nazis in America, I will demonstrate how the Jew’s negotiation of both literal and metaphorical boundaries allows her to exist between binaries and resist far-right ideological operations – or to find power in her failure when she cannot successfully subvert them.

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The ethics of researching the far right

Critical approaches and reflections

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