Bastos e Guimarães (2015)
Bastos e Guimarães (2015)
Bastos e Guimarães (2015)
This
paper
is
about
the
inherent
tensions
in
the
self-‐other
relationships
that
emerge
from
approximations
and
estrangements
imposed
by
field
research
situations.
This
matter
is
discussed
in
terms
of
the
affective
bonds
between
researcher
and
participants,
and
in
relation
to
the
personal
involvement
of
the
researcher
with
the
object
of
study.
The
investigation
is
based
on
the
dialogical
perspective
of
the
semiotic-‐cultural
constructivism,
incorporating
recent
reflections
concerning
the
notion
of
perspective
and
dialogical
multiplication.
We
forwarded
the
development
of
a
research
project
concerning
meaning
construction
on
the
topic
of
daily
life
in
the
circus.
The
interest
in
this
subject
arose
from
previous
personal
experience
of
the
first
author
of
this
study.
We
sought
to
a)
identify
descriptive
elements
of
everyday
life
in
the
circus
b)
the
moments
of
tension
that
emerge
in
the
self-‐other
relationships
and
c)
the
dialogical
position
that
emerge
at
the
process
of
meaning
construction.
To
this
paper,
we
selected
an
analysis
of
a
content
registered
in
the
field
notebook
about
their
first
meeting
that
took
place
during
the
process
of
information
gathering,
preliminary
to
the
research
planned
procedure.
The
selected
report
allowed
us
to
reflect
on
the
intersubjective
and
intrasubjective
tensions
we
may
encounter
as
we
speak
to
others
from
different
dialogical
perspectives.
1
The
interest
in
such
topic
had
arisen
from
previous
personal
experience
of
the
first
author
of
this
paper,
who
worked
and
accompanied
three
different
circuses
in
Mexico
at
the
eighties,
for
a
period
of
four
years.
It
was
a
challenging
experience,
among
other
things,
because
the
daily
life
of
circuses
inhabitants
is
singular:
living
in
trailers,
traveling
in
caravans,
constantly
moving
from
city
to
city
for
the
presentations.
Years
after
leaving
the
circus
life
and
the
profession
of
circus
performer,
the
first
author
of
this
paper
decided
to
major
in
psychology.
Nevertheless,
the
former
experience
was
affectively
meaningful
and
remained
with
her
during
the
new
formation
period,
because
experiencing
the
circus
universe
was
personally
transformative
since
it
provided
her
with
a
perspective
of
a
new
way
of
living,
a
new
mindset
towards
family,
work
and
the
circus.
Moreover,
it
presented
to
her
new
aspects
of
living
in
a
group,
which
modified
her
own
way
of
living
and
the
way
in
which
she
related
to
the
world.
Consequently,
the
circus
led
the
researcher
towards
psychology,
in
order
to
comprehend
human
relationships
in
peculiar
sociocultural
fields,
as
well
as
elaborate
some
gaps
in
the
intercultural
boundaries,
aiming
at
analyzing
the
uneasiness
and
meaning
constructions
that
emerge
out
of
life
trajectories
that
penetrate
different
cultural
contexts.
Semiotic-‐cultural
constructivism
in
psychology
(cf.
Simão
2005,
2010)
led
the
ex-‐
circus-‐performer-‐now-‐psychologist
to
go
back
to
the
circus
as
a
researcher,
in
order
to
understand
the
contemporaneous
circus
everyday
life
from
this
novel
position.
This
approach
guides
the
psychological
investigation
to
focus
the
genesis
of
the
research
processes,
to
observe
the
limits
in
the
articulation
of
theory
and
method,
and
regards
the
researcher
as
an
important
part
of
the
investigative
process,
instead
preconizing
the
impartiality
in
the
process
of
knowledge
construction.
Considering
the
understanding
of
the
human
being
in
its
uniqueness
regarding
the
cultural
context
in
which
we
are
immersed,
and
based
on
what
was
reported
by
the
research´s
participants,
three
things
were
investigated
a)
descriptive
elements
of
their
everyday
life,
b)
the
moments
of
tension
in
the
self-‐other
relations
and
c)
dialogical
positions
that
emerged
in
the
process
of
meaning
construction.
We
supposed
that
such
focus
of
investigation
demanded
a
strategy
of
participatory
research,
involving
the
action
research
methodology
(cf.
Spink,
1976,
2003),
and
ethnography
(cf.
Oliveira,
1998;
Andrade,
Morato
and
Schimidt,
2007).
These
methodological
references
emphasize
the
active
role
of
the
researcher
and
of
the
participant
in
the
scientific
enterprise.
Therefore,
the
stream
of
events
that
become
object
for
psychological
analysis
(cf.
Guimarães,
2010a)
is
understood
as
a
dynamic,
open-‐ended
system
(cf.
Valsiner,
1998,
2001,
2007).
As
Moura
and
Hernandez
(2012)
emphasize,
the
attention
of
the
researcher
needs
to
be
focused
on
the
experience
and
on
the
finding
of
semiotic
tracks
of
the
process
in
course.
Dialogical
Cultural
Psychology
and
the
Construction
of
the
Researcher
Position
2
Dialogical
approach
to
cultural
psychology
asserts
that
knowledge
is
mediated
by
the
position
of
the
subject
in
the
face
of
an
object.
In
social
and
scientific
fields,
multiple
positions
can
emerge
in
the
face
of
a
singular
object.
Therefore,
knowledge
is
a
dynamic
and
transitory
feature
linked
to
the
historical-‐cultural
fields
and
transformed
during
the
dialogical
process
of
meaning
negotiation
between
the
Alter
and
the
Ego
(cf.
Marková,
2006).
The
researcher,
as
a
knowledge
constructor,
actively
assumes
a
position
that
allows
him
or
her
to
present
a
psychological
perspective
towards
the
investigated
topic.
Researcher,
object
of
investigation
and
knowledge
construction
are
interdependent,
so
it
is
necessary
to
take
into
account
the
scientific-‐semiotic-‐cultural
process
that
leads
to
the
emergence
of
novelties
in
the
psychological
framework.
Simão
(2010)
argues
that
theoretical
and
methodological
framework
of
the
semiotic-‐
cultural
constructivism
emerged
in
the
last
decades
of
the
20th
century
out
of
propositions
from
Lev
Vygotsky,
Mikhail
Bakthin,
George
Mead,
Pierre
Janet,
Jean
Piaget.
Contemporarily,
the
cultural
psychologies
of
Ernst
Boesch,
Jaan
Valsiner
and
the
dialogical
conceptions
of
Marková
and
Rommetveit
granted
a
broader
understanding
of
the
personal-‐cultural
symbolic
development
in
articulation
with
their
precursory
ideas.
Ernst
Boesch,
a
pioneer
of
the
European
cultural
psychology,
emphasizes
that
through
symbolic
actions,
people
construct
personal
meanings
in
articulation
with
the
meanings
constructed
by
the
others,
emerging
from
the
interaction
of
objective
and
subjective
references
with
the
symbolic
cultural
field
of
action
(Simão,
2002).
Methodologically,
it
implies
highlighting
the
options
and
the
historicity
of
changes
in
the
course
of
investigation.
The
researcher
works
to
understand
the
changes
concerning
the
development
of
his
relationship
with
the
participants,
as
well
as
to
interpret
the
themes
that
emerge
in
the
course
of
the
research
(cf.
Boesch,
1991;
Valsiner,
1998;
Guimarães
and
Simão,
2007,
Guimarães,
2011).
The
hermeneutic
option
of
the
semiotic-‐cultural
constructivism
in
psychology
follows
this
path
of
investigation
(Simão,
2005;
2010;
Valsiner,
2007).
The
investigative
framework
of
semiotic-‐cultural
constructivism
in
psychology
elects
the
disquieting
experience
as
the
cornerstone
to
the
comprehension
of
I-‐other-‐world
relationships:
By
disquieting
experience,
I
mean
experience
that
hurts
our
expectances,
prodding
the
subject
cognitively
as
well
as
affectively
to
feel,
think
and
act.
The
affected
person
may
be
the
actor
who
lives
the
experience
itself,
or
another
person
who
co-‐experiences
the
actor’s
disquiet
through
verbal
dialogue
or
joint
silence.
The
co-‐experiencer
is,
therefore,
displaced
from
his/her
own
previous
position
as
is
the
interlocutor
(Simão,
2003,
italics
in
the
original).
In
this
paper,
the
perspectives
of
researcher
and
participants
on
the
circus
are
regarded
considering
the
contrast
between
different
life
trajectories,
which
can
lead
3
with
the
permission
of
all
participants
through
a
Statement
of
Consent
which
was
prepared
in
accordance
with
the
standards
of
the
National
Committee
of
Ethics
in
Research
(CONEP/BRAZIL).
In
addition
to
all
audio-‐recorded
data
the
researcher
kept
a
field
notebook,
which
was
an
important
device
to
the
investigation
and
contained
her
impressions
about
the
experience.
Much
to
our
surprise,
the
field
notebook
precisely
provided
the
empirical
data
that
allowed
us
to
understand
a
crucial
moment
of
the
investigation:
we
found
in
the
preliminary
visits
the
key
that
led
us
to
understand
the
construction
of
a
shared
setting
to
the
investigative
path.
In
this
direction,
we
intend
to
promote
a
reflection
on
aspects
of
a
dialogue
between
the
researcher
and
one
of
the
members
of
the
circus,
through
the
analysis
of
their
first
meeting
that
occurred
during
the
process
of
information
gathering.
At
this
preliminary
moment,
the
researcher
chatted
with
some
circus
members.
We
decided
to
present
an
analysis
of
the
following
field
work
written
report,
instead
of
some
of
the
audio-‐recorded
data,
because
we
considered
that
this
account
offers
a
clear
image
of
the
cultural
commitment
of
the
researcher
and
participants
of
the
dialogue
during
knowledge
construction.
The
Situation
of
the
Meeting
This
meeting
took
place
in
the
circus,
in
the
second
of
three
visits
for
the
preliminary
investigation.
Since
she
did
not
know
anyone
from
that
circus
company
or
anyone
who
worked
there,
the
main
reason
for
these
visits
was
to
come
forward
and
report,
according
to
research
guidelines,
to
someone
who
was
responsible
for
the
institution
seeking
a
possible
authorization
for
doing
research
in
that
space1,
and
also
to
make
a
first
contact
with
the
members
of
the
circus
in
order
to
invite
them
to
participate
in
the
study.
The
analyzed
dialogue
with
the
circus
performer,
named
here
as
CM
(Member
of
the
Circus),
is
the
result
of
the
researcher´s
memories
from
the
meeting
that
took
place
between
them,
which
is
shown
in
the
manner
the
researcher
wrote
in
her
field
diary
in
the
same
day,
after
the
meeting
with
CM.
Therefore,
since
it
is
not
a
transcript
of
the
interview,
it
should
not
be
understood
as
a
fragment
or
a
recording.
We
decided
to
present
the
field
note
as
a
dialogue
because
it
was
the
manner
in
which
the
researcher
spontaneously
registered
this
moment.
Besides,
it
allows
the
reader
to
be
in
touch
with
the
intensity
of
the
intersubjective
involvement
between
the
participants
in
the
meeting,
without
the
textual
mediation
of
a
third
person
narrator
(although
we
consider
that
an
active
narrator
is
always
present,
implicitly
or
explicitly).
It
was
predictable
that
her
coming
back
to
the
circus
as
a
researcher
would
put
her
in
touch
with
her
previous
experiences
as
an
artist.
Consequently,
the
researcher
expected
to
find
an
agreeable
and
familiar
place,
which
was
confirmed
in
her
first
visit
1
The
circus
administrator
accepted
the
research
after
being
informed
about
the
objectives
and
methodological
procedures.
5
to
the
circus.
Despite
being
aware
that
the
approach
to
the
circus
territory
would
be
a
negotiated
process
—
which
is
usually
the
case
in
fieldwork
that
includes
communitarian
visits
—
the
researcher
created
the
expectancy
of
being
welcomed
by
all
of
the
circus
members.
Then
a
disquieting
experience
emerged,
which
could
be
observed
in
the
following
dialogue.
Excerpt
from
the
field
notebook
of
Suara
Bastos2:
01
S.
-‐
Good
evening!
02
CM.
-‐
We
here
at
the
circus
do
not
like
to
give
interviews!
We
are
all
illiterate.
At
this
point
the
lady
in
the
ticket
booth
said
aloud:
03
TL.
-‐
Not
all
of
us!
Speak
for
yourself,
because
I'm
not
illiterate.
04
S.
-‐
Ah,
but
my
aim
is
not
only
to
do
an
interview,
I
would
also
like
to
get
to
know
you.
I've
worked
in
the
circus
and
I
love
it.
My
research
is
just
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
history
of
the
circus.
Although
he
remained
serious,
she
asked:
05
S.
–
Do
many
people
come
here
to
do
interviews?
06
CM.
-‐
Pfff,
people
come
here
all
the
time.
Just
the
other
day
some
folks
came
from
the
UG.
07
S.
–
And
what
was
their
work
about,
do
you
know?
08
CM.
-‐
I
do
not.
09
S.
-‐
Sorry,
what's
your
name?
10
CM.
-‐
A.
11
S.
-‐
A.
Nice
to
meet
you
A.,
I'm
Suara.
As
I
said,
I've
worked
and
lived
in
the
circus
before
and
I
like
it
a
lot.
The
aim
of
my
research
is
to
show
people
the
circus
as
it
really
is,
from
the
artists’
point
of
view.
I
would
like
to
show
people
how
great
it
is
and
that
it’s
not
what
most
people
think
it
is.
12
CM.
-‐
It's
true,
they
think
we're
a
bunch
of
illiterates
who
do
not
shower.
13
S.
-‐
I
know
that
and
that’s
the
reason
I'm
here.
I
am
a
student
at
the
University
of
São
Paulo,
and
the
topic
of
my
dissertation
is
the
circus.
I
would
like
to
contribute
to
demystify
this
idea
about
circus
artists.
14
CM.
You're
from
USP?
Oh,
I
know
USP.
I
had
an
accident
once
and
they
took
me
to
the
hospital
there
and
I
was
very
well
cared-for.
The
hospital
is
very
good.
15
S.
-‐
What
happened?
16
-‐
CM.
–
I
had
something
in
my
eye,
but
they
took
me
there
and
I
was
promptly
attended.
Today
I
am
fine.
17
S.
–
I’m
glad,
USP
is
really
very
cool.
18
CM.
-‐
I
think
that
after
this
we’re
going
to
a
place
near
there.
19
S.
-‐
Really?
That's
cool.
The
other
day
I
saw
a
circus
right
in
front
of
it.
I
think
it
was
C.S.
20
CM
-‐
Yeah...
but
we
can’t
stay
in
those
grounds.
21
S.
-‐
How
so?
22
CM.
-‐
They
only
rent
it
to
outsiders.
It
is
absurd.
2
This
encounter
with
a
member
of
the
circus
occurred
in
a
casual
way.
As
the
researcher
approached
the
circus
entry
she
noticed
the
presence
of
a
guy
who
was
talking
to
the
lady
in
the
ticket
booth.
As
he
seemed
to
be
quite
relaxed
she
greeted
“Good
evening”.
Then
the
following
dialogue
started,
where
S
is
the
Researcher;
CM,
the
member
of
the
circus,
and
TL,
the
ticket
booth
lady.
6
23
S.
-‐
You
are
absolutely
right,
I
agree
with
you.
For
this
reason
I
believe
that
my
job
is
important.
I'd
like
to
help
change
the
image
that
people
have
of
the
circus,
because
I
know
from
my
experience
that
most
people
are
unaware
of
what
the
routine
and
daily
life
in
the
circus
are
really
like,
and
for
this
reason
they
have
a
misconception
of
it.
24
CM.
-‐
I
understand,
and
a
master's
degree
has
a
much
broader
scope,
doesn't
it?
25
S.
–
With
no
doubt,
that’s
why
I
am
here.
But
I
will
only
speak
to
those
who
are
interested
in
participating
in
the
research,
participation
is
not
mandatory.
In
addition,
neither
participant
nor
the
Circus
will
be
identified.
26
CM.
-‐
Ah!
27
S.
–
Have
you
been
here
long?
28
CM.
-‐
My
whole
life.
29
S.
-‐
What
is
your
role
here?
30
CM.
-‐
I
do
everything,
but
most
of
the
time
I'm
the
driver.
There
used
to
be
two
of
us,
now
it’s
just
me.
I’m
the
one
who
drives
the
sound
car.
31
S.
-‐
Oh,
so
you
do
the
advertising?
I
hear
you
drive
through
my
street.
32
CM.
-‐
You
live
near
here?
33
S.
-‐
On
the
street
parallel
to
this
one,
we
are
very
close.
34
CM.
-‐
Oh,
I
know
where
that
is.
I
know
quite
a
lot
here.
35
S.
–
Do
you
have
friendships
outside
the
circus?
36
CM.
-‐
We
always
do,
but
usually
we
do
not
relate
much
with
outsiders.
37
S.
-‐
Why
not?
38
CM.
-‐
I
don’t
know,
they
don’t
want
much
contact
with
us.
39
S.
-‐
And
do
you
want
contact
with
them?
40
CM.
-‐
Yeah...
there’s
also
that.
I
think
it's
a
bit
of
both.
41
S.
–
How
do
you
call
people
who
are
not
from
the
circus,
I
mean,
the
ones
who
do
not
live
in
the
circus?
42
CM.
–
I
don´t
know…
I
don´t
know,
they
are
from
other
society.
Disquieting
Experience
and
Knowledge
Construction
Being
immediately
challenged
by
CM
in
a
rude
manner
evinced
the
restlessness
and
strangeness
caused
by
the
arrival
of
an
alien
who
was
immediately
fitted
into
a
previously
conceived
category.
CM
expressed
a
preconception
about
an
academic
research.
We
are
using
the
notion
of
preconception
in
the
Gadamerian
sense
(Gadamer,
1985;
Simão
2005;
2010),
according
to
which
[…]
each
person
entering
a
dialogue
will
unavoidably
bring
his/her
presuppositions
with
him/her
(cf.
Taylor,
2002);
the
issue,
then,
is
not
to
get
rid
of
our
own
presuppositions,
but
to
take
into
account
that
the
other
will
have
his/her
own,
which
will
probably
enter
into
some
disagreement
with
ours
(Guimarães,
2011,
p.
146).
Such
situation
led
CM
to
refuse
the
researcher
approach
by
means
of
using
a
social
representation
as
a
symbolic
resource3
to
keep
him
away
from
what
was
supposed
to
3
The
notions
of
social
representation
and
symbolic
resources
are
being
used
here
to
refer
to
a
dynamic
meaningful
semiotic
device
used
to
organize
the
disquieting
experience
and
to
enable
a
shared
7
be
her
interest.
By
saying
“we
are
all
illiterate”,
he
is
professing
his
belief
that
being
such
means
that
there
is
nothing
he
could
possibly
contribute
to
the
research,
reaffirming
that
the
researcher
does
not
belong
to
his
universe
and
how
far
they
are
from
each
other.
To
the
researcher,
this
was
a
distressing
and
unexpected
moment
because
even
though she
tried
to
get
closer
as
a former
circus
performer
she
was
immediately
identified
and
received
as
an
academic.
At
this
point,
a
gap
emerged
between
the
situation
itself
and
the
researcher’s
expectations
on
how
she
would
be
treated.
The
dialogue
evinced
a
tension
that
emerged
from
rupture
of
expectation
that
she
had
for
the
initial
contact.
Apparently,
this
led
her
to
keep
talking
(or
not)
with
him
in
a
process
of
affective-‐cognitive
reconstructions
that
demanded
a
reorganization
of
meaning
–
something
that
possibly
also
occurred
with
CM
at
that
moment.
When
the
ticket
booth
lady
intervened
and
disagreed
with
CM
by
saying
“Not
all
of
us!
Speak
for
yourself,
because
I´m
not”,
she
indicates
that
he
should
speak
only
for
himself
and
not
for
all
circus
workers.
So
the
lady´s
intervention
as
a
member
of
the
community
not
only
denotes
the
intrinsic
diversity
in
the
cultural
field
in
question,
where
a
variety
of
“availableness”
for
the
meeting
with
the
“other”
co-‐exist,
but
also
creates
a
plan
for
intersubjective
sharing,
reducing
the
difference
between
the
participants
of
the
dialogue.
Researcher
and
CM
were
considered
as
owners
of
a
same
knowledge
and
social
condition
provided
by
literacy
because
of
the
active
intervention
of
the
ticket
booth,
questioning
the
distancing
process
carried
out
by
CM.
Her
attitude
brought
more
comfort
to
the
researcher
because
by
then
she
feared
being
ostracized
by
the
lady
too.
So
she
glimpsed
the
possibility
to
carry
on
the
dialogue
with
CM
through
a
different
approach,
since
the
desire
for
some
kind
of
sharing
of
meanings
requires
adjustments
of
the
different
positions
of
the
interlocutors
in
the
dialogue
(Rommetveit,
1994,
Guimarães,
2010a).
Looking
for
a
way
to
overcome
the
situation,
and
also
looking
for
a
closer
approach,
the
researcher
decided
to
justify
her
presence
to
CM
saying
that
her
aim
was
not
only
to
do
an
interview,
but
that
she
would
also
like
to
get
to
know
them
and
explained
that
she
had
worked
in
the
circus
and
liked
it
a
lot.
By
portraying
herself
as
one
of
them,
or
rather,
as
someone
who
also
is
(or
was)
a
part
of
the
circus,
she
minimized
the
resistance
and
tension
that
had
been
established
before.
She
places
herself
as
someone
who
knows
the
context
in
which
he
lives
and
which
comprises
somewhat
with
what
he
feels.
Although
he
remained
serious,
the
researcher
changed
the
focus
of
the
dialogue,
displacing
the
anxious
aspect
of
the
meeting
to
another
situation
by
asking
him
if
there
were
many
people
going
to
the
circus
to
conduct
research.
He
answered
affirmatively.
The
researcher
aimed
to
know
if
there
would
have
been
any
previous
unpleasantness
or
dissatisfaction
with
this
practice
and
those
who
practice
it.
She
reasoned
that
perhaps
too
many
people
had
already
sought
the
circus
to
conduct
research
and
that
background
for
the
continuity
of
the
communicative
process
(cf.
Moscovici,
2003;
Marková,
2006;
Zittoun,
2006).
8
this
had
somehow
displeased
CM;
or
worse
still,
maybe
he
had
had
personal
issues
with
some
other
researcher.
When
she
asked
him
what
people
usually
researched
about,
he
told
her
he
did
not
know,
once
again
making
no
effort
to
hide
his
discomfort
with
her
presence
and
making
it
clear
that
he
would
not
participate
in
the
investigation.
As
he
did
not
show
any
interest
in
continuing
to
talk
about
the
topic,
the
researcher
tried
to
show
him
her
bond
with
the
circus
and
her
goals
with
the
research,
reinforcing
the
fact
that
she
had
worked
in
the
circus
earlier
in
life
and
emphasizing
that
her
intentions
were
to
clarify
a
little
bit
more
what
is
the
circus
and
the
circus
life
as
a
way
to
demystify
possible
misconceptions
that
could
exist
in
the
opinion
of
people
who
do
not
belong
to
this
universe.
CM
agrees
with
her
point,
finally
allowing
some
sharing
of
plans
to
take
place
between
them.
Next,
the
researcher
mentioned
the
institution
in
which
she
studies
and
do
research.
CM
not
only
knew
the
institution
but
he
had
had
a
good
experience
there.
He
had
been
well
attended
at
the
University
Hospital
when
he
had
suffered
an
accident
at
the
circus.
A
process
of
greater
trust
towards
her
and
her
intentions
began.
Once
she
was
able
to
make
affective-‐cognitive
adjustments
relevant
to
this
dialogue,
she
also
allowed
CM
to
make
a
similar
movement,
which
can
be
seen
when
he
expresses
his
knowledge
of
some
aspects
from
the
researcher’s
environment.
The
researcher
was
put
in
a
position
where
she
had
to
cross
her
boundaries
allowing
an
intersubjective
sharing
with
the
other
to
happen.
[...]
The
counter-argument
from
the
asymmetric
other
connotes
the
relative
positions
of
the
interlocutors
at
that
moment
because
it
points
to
the
actor’s
limits
of
symbolic
action
while
challenging
their
implementation.
(Simão
2004,
p.
35).
By
continuing
to
talk
to
CM,
the
researcher
realizes
that,
contrary
to
what
he
intended
to
demonstrate,
he
is
a
guy
who
expresses
himself
very
well
and
has
some
knowledge
about
the
academic
life.
It
first
happens
when
he
makes
it
clear
that
he
recognizes
how
a
survey
as
a
Masters
dissertation
may
be
relevant
to
the
circus
world,
and
then
when
he
seems
angry
about
the
valuation
of
international
circuses
over
national
ones.
The
comment
that
outsiders
imagine
that
everyone
in
the
circus
is
illiterate
and
does
not
bathe
can
be
used
to
justify
his
resistance
to
talk
to
the
researcher
as
well
as
the
failure
to
relate
to
people
from
this
"other
society".
This
fact
placed
by
CM
highlights
the
tensions
that
arise
from
differences
between
the
positions
"I"
and
"other”.
He
has
an
idea
of
how
"outsiders"
see
the
circus,
he
also
assumes
they
do
not
want
much
contact
with
the
circus;
but
when
enabling
this
detachment,
i.e.,
by
not
allowing
contact
with
this
"other
society,"
there
is
no
way
to
make
sure
if
his
suspicions
are
well
founded
or
not.
Instead,
this
attitude
deprives
outsiders
of
knowing,
at
least
slightly,
how
in
fact
the
"reality"
of
the
circus
and
of
those
who
live
there
is.
We
could
say
that
this
was
the
crucial
point
for
the
research,
since
it
allowed
the
knowledge
constructions
that
came
about.
Noticing
the
dialogue,
the
ticket
lady
not
9
only
became
available
to
take
part
in
the
research,
but
also
encouraged
other
participants
to
do
the
same,
which
significantly
contributed
to
the
theme
of
the
investigation.
Even
though
CM
specifically
was
not
so
willing
to
be
interviewed
and
did
not
participate,
he
was
kind
and
gentle
with
the
researcher
in
the
following
occasions
they
have
met.
From
the
beginning
to
the
end
of
the
investigative
process
he
remained
in
the
position
of
non-‐cooperation.
Cooperation
requires
not
only
coordination
of
interpretative
strategies
that
depend
on
both
the
speaker
and
the
listener,
but
rather
depends
on
the
intention
to
cooperate.
[...]
speakers
and
listeners
are
not
mere
participants,
thus
in
the
process
of
conversation,
they
act
as
active
agents
that
depend
on
their
own
inferences
as
interactive
guides
of
conduct
to
judge
what
is
interaction.
(Gumperz,
1995,
p.
104).
We
considered
that
if
CM
and
the
researcher
had
lived
longer
together,
it
would
have
been
possible
to
establish
a
greater
approximation
between
them,
which
would
have
possibly
changed
CM's
opinion
in
relation
to
his
participation
in
the
investigation,
given
that
he
maintained
himself
close
the
entire
time
and
was
receptive
to
the
researcher's
presence
in
her
later
visits.
On
the
other
hand,
the
existent
gaps
are
inherent
to
the
investigative
process,
which
does
not
reach
for
a
total
apprehension
of
the
phenomena
in
study,
but
to
construct
the
knowledge
through
possible
openings
in
the
relationships
with
the
participants.
We
noticed
that
in
the
I-‐other
relation,
more
precisely
in
the
dialogue
between
the
researcher
and
the
potential
participant,
initial
agreements
could
be
made
available
over
the
course
of
interaction,
under
the
risk
of
rupture.
Although
temporary,
these
agreements
allow
dialogue
to
happen.
This
is
possible
because
each
participant
of
a
dialogue
believes
that
some
kind
of
intersubjective
sharing
is
possible
in
the
course
of
interaction
(Rommetveit,
1994,
Guimarães
and
Simão,
2007).
The
analyzed
field
research
notes
concerning
the
experience
of
the
researcher
allowed
us
to
explore
some
general
characteristics
of
the
dialogue,
addressing
the
necessary
constitution
of
an
affective
common
field
for
meaning
construction.
In
the
presented
case,
the
affective
common
field
was
grounded
in
previous
experiences,
and
addressed
the
attachments
of
the
researcher
and
the
participant
in
relation
to
the
circus.
Affective
Attachment
in
Field
Research
The
selected
report
allowed
us
to
reflect
on
the
possibilities
and
limits
we
may
encounter
as
we
speak
to
others.
In
any
dialogue
people
open
up
and
then
close
themselves,
not
completely
but
provisionally,
in
accordance
with
the
limits
and
restrictions
imposed
by
themselves
and
the
other.
Affectivity
has
a
prime
role
in
this
process,
because
the
cognitive,
sign-‐mediated
forms
of
knowledge
are
affective
in
their
nature
(cf.
Josephs,
2000;
Valsiner,
2007).
10
For
Valsiner,
the
relationship
I-‐other-‐world
is
primarily
affectionate.
The
primary
and
physiological
affection
strikes
from
the
semiotic
signification
of
feelings
and
emotions.
When
we
signify
the
affections,
subjective
and
reflective
cultural-‐semiotic
characteristics
enter
the
picture
(Valsiner,
2012).
The
primary
affections
would,
therefore,
be
referred
as
a
kind
of
cloudy
field
that
would
catalyse
the
proximities
and
distances
in
the
relationships
with
others
and
with
the
world,
from
which
possible
intersubjective
sharing
would
unfold.
We
feel
in
a
certain
way
with
regard
to
somebody
or
something
or
ourselves.
Feeling
is
a
dynamic
process
located
in
the
feeling
person,
sometimes
salient,
powerful
and
overwhelming,
sometimes
hidden
in
the
background;
sometimes
fuzzy
and
not
easy-‐or
even
impossible-‐to
verbalize,
sometimes
clearly
framed
and
categorized
within
the
language
of
feeling
and
emotion.
This
process
can
lead
either
to
the
transformation
or
to
the
maintenance
of
our
present
relationship
to
the
world
and
to
ourselves.
[Josephs,
2000
p.
815].
During
the
dialogue,
the
symbolic
elaboration
of
the
participant
acts
recursively
on
the
affective
field
of
the
researcher,
who
is
disquieted
(i.e.
ruptured
in
his/her
expectancies).
It
demands
a
reorganization
of
the
affective
field
through
the
creation
of
a
new
understanding
of
what
is
happening
in
the
situation,
leading
the
participants
to
be
affected
and
to
elaborate
it
symbolically
(cf.
Guimarães,
2010a).
In
this
sense,
a
field
research
is
also
an
intervention
over
the
studied
reality.
According
to
Josephs
“feeling
is
an
experience
rooted
in
the
person
as
a
whole.
For
Stern,
feeling
is
related
to
the
course
of
personal
activity
in
time,
that
is,
feeling
is
related
to
the
present,
the
past
and
the
future”
(2010
p.
822).
Upon
returning
to
the
circus,
the
researcher
came
across
intense
and
contradictory
feelings.
Being
back
to
that
world
made
her
face
memories
from
her
past
as
a
circus
artist;
at
the
same
time,
she
had
to
deal
with
emotions
that
were
rising
at
that
moment
in
time,
such
as
the
tension
she
faced
in
her
meeting
with
C.M.,
which
contributed
to
her
having
higher
expectations
regarding
the
future
of
the
investigation.
To
the
semiotic-‐cultural
constructivism
in
psychology,
the
search
for
intersubjective
sharing
is
one
of
the
most
important
ways
of
changing
in
human
development,
which
is
understood
by
means
of
the
cultural
changes
that
are
experienced
and
internalized
by
the
person
(Guimarães,
2010b).
Thus,
the
fragment
which
was
analyzed
made
it
possible
for
us
to
explore
some
characteristics
of
verbal
interaction
in
which
both
met
somehow
inserted
into
a
common
field
of
meaning
that
was
represented
in
this
case
by
MC´s
circus
and
the
researcher´s
circus,
i.e.,
the
verbal
interaction
established
between
them
in
a
large
scale
was
made
possible
and
permitted,
once
the
barriers
imposed
by
CM
and
possibly
also
by
the
researcher
were
removed,
at
the
same
time
as
emphasizing
the
symbolic
similarities
they
shared
in
some
measure,
namely
being
both
circus
artists.
11
Due
to
the
lack
of
interest
of
CM
in
sharing
his
life
experiences,
it
was
necessary
for
the
researcher
to
adopt
a
posture
that
could
build
a
relation
based
on
empathy
and
trust.
To
make
this
possible
it
was
essential
to
show
him
the
respectful
attitude
of
the
researcher
towards
both
the
circus
members
and
the
field
of
investigation,
just
as
it
was
essential
to
show
him
how
important
his
role
was
in
the
research.
The
originally
nebulous
experience—meeting
an
unknown
person
under
a
new
vivid
circumstance—was
filled
with
the
common
background
of
the
researcher
and
the
circus
member.
Her
past
experience
as
a
circus
artist
facilitated
her
approach
to
people
in
that
cultural
field.
The
common
background
allowed
CM
to
recognize
in
the
researcher
and
himself
a
space
where
both
were,
to
some
extent,
not
simply
equal
or
similar,
but
rather
representatives
of
one
part
of
a
whole
that
brought
them
together.
Therefore,
at
that
moment
they
were
part
of
the
“circus”
and
right
then
and
there
they
could
be,
in
different
measures,
circus
artists.
Dialogical
Multiplication
and
Field
Research
The
dialogical
conception
of
the
minimal
communicative
situation
conceives
that
the
tension
emerge
when
Alter
and
Ego
negotiate
meanings
about
a
topic
of
discussion
or
an
object
of
social
representation
(cf.
Marková,
2006;
Cornejo,
2008).
Triadic
pictures
or
metaphors
are
often
used
to
account
any
dialogical
process
(Moscovici,
2003;
Marková,
2006;
Simão
and
Valsiner,
2007;
Simão,
2012),
granting
the
comprehension
of
differences
and
tensions
around
a
specific
topic
or
social
representation
(object).
On
the
other
hand,
this
article
presents
a
discussion
concerning
a
moment
of
the
I-‐
other
interaction
that
is
previous
to
the
dialogue,
a
situation
preliminary
to
the
research,
in
which
the
involved
persons
are
still
unknown
to
each
other,
that
is,
the
participants
do
not
have
a
common
object
for
a
more
meaningful
negotiation.
Although
there
is
a
gap
between
them,
some
approximation
can
be
constructed
through
an
intervention
upon
the
affective-‐nebulous
intersection
provided
by
the
meeting.
The
notion
of
dialogical
multiplication
is
a
theoretical
and
methodological
device
that
allows
us
to
put
into
focus
precisely
the
gaps
between
Self
and
other
in
interaction
(cf.
Guimarães,
2013).
From
this,
we
presuppose
that
there
are
different
objects
of
reference
in
the
discourse
of
a
person
engaged
in
the
dialogue
with
otherness.
These
symbolic
objects
are
linked
to
the
emergence
of
a
common
background
that
serves
as
reference
for
the
dialogue—ie.,
the
research;
the
artistic,
the
friendship
or
other
setting
for
intersubjective
sharing.
Creative
semiotic
elaborations
in
face
of
the
experience
of
nebulous
others
and
world
are
can
be
observed
in
each
Self
that
mutually
affects
the
other
in
a
nebulous
immanent
exchange.
By
nebulosity
I
mean
the
affective
pre-‐semiotic
flow
of
experience
in
the
boundary
of
the
Self,
other
and
world
(cf.
Valsiner,
2007).
On
the
other
hand,
semiotic
constrains
are
built
and
socially
shared
in
order
to
overcome
the
disquieting
(Simão,
12
2003)
experience
emerged
from
the
nebulous
field.
These
semiotic
constructions
are
diversely
constructed
by
different
cultural
manufacturing.
Consequently,
the
multiplication
of
cultures
entails
a
field
of
divergences
concerning
interobjective
constructions
of
meanings
among
members
that
share
specific
cultural
fields.
Global
society,
for
instance,
evinces
the
existence
of
differently
shared
religiosity,
languages,
rituals,
habits
and
maybe…
psychologies!
A
similar
principle
of
dialogical
multiplication
can
be
derived
to
our
reflection
on
the
Self:
the
multiplication
of
symbolic
objects
at
the
core
of
cultural
interchanges,
rather
than
achieving
an
equivalent
semiotic
reference,
addresses
some
limits
for
the
integration
between
intrasubjective
and
intersubjective
plans
of
Self
experiences.
Dissimilarities
under
same
notions
can
be
now
focused
under
a
dialogical
approach:
in
Self–otherness
relation,
imaginative
activities
based
on
previous
culturally
constructed
meanings
take
place
in
order
to
fill
disquieting
experiences
(Guimarães,
2013,
p.
223).
Researcher
Member
of
the
circus
Figure
1:
Dialogical
multiplication
as
an
illustration
of
I-‐other
differences
in
the
preliminary
moment
of
field
research.
The
double
dialogicality
allows
us
to
conceive
the
alterity
of
the
participant
at
the
moment
in
which
I
and
other
are
constructing
a
common
ground
for
the
dialogue,
at
13
the
same
time
conceiving
the
centrality
of
affectivity
in
this
process:
approximation,
avoidance,
rudeness
and
efforts
for
converging
attitudes,
play
an
arm
wrestling
in
which
the
researcher
and
the
participant
may
be
able
to
continue
to
interact
or
decide
to
abandon
the
dialogue.
In
the
discussed
situation,
the
potential
participant
CM
kept
his
decision
of
not
participating
until
the
end
of
the
research
process,
nevertheless,
for
the
sake
of
the
investigation
his
acceptance
of
the
figure
of
the
researcher
created
the
necessary
openness
for
future
interviews.
The
interest
of
the
researcher
in
the
circus
life
and
its
previous
experience
was
decisive.
In
fact,
she
manifested
herself
as
someone
acting
in
favor
of
circuses
interests,
affirming
that
she
“would
like
to
contribute
to
demystify
this
idea
of
circus
artists”
and
“would
like
to
show
people
how
great
it
is
and
that
it’s
not
like
most
of
them
think”
(cf.
p.
5
of
this
paper).
On
one
hand,
when
the
researcher
verbalizes
her
personal
opinion
about
the
circus,
she
reassures
her
understanding
of
the
process
of
investigation
as
an
opportunity
to
publicize
aspects
of
the
circus
life
that
usually
are
not
well
known.
From
ethical
and
analytical
point
of
view,
this
attitude
mean
that
she
is
aware
that
the
scientific
knowledge
has
a
particular
role
in
the
broad
cultural
field,
acting
"over
the
socio-‐cultural
reality
as
a
whole,
exchanging
meanings,
producing
discourses
and
validating
conceptions"
(Guimarães,
2012).
The
scientific
investigation
has
social
implications,
the
researcher
is
unavoidable
positioned
and
is
co-‐responsible
for
the
consequences
of
the
knowledge
constructed
and
published.
On
the
other
hand,
these
utterances
express
how
the
researcher
tried
to
reduce
CM’s
avoidance
by
showing
that
in
fact
she
is
not
so
distant
or
different
from
him,
and
more,
she
intends
to
contribute
with
the
circus
way
of
life.
Actually,
the
original
investigative
aim—to
understand
the
circus
everyday
life—is
enlarged
at
this
moment,
revealing
a
tacit
aim
of
the
researcher
as
she
is
identified
with
the
artist’s
position.
That
is,
the
researcher
revealed
to
be
someone
affectively
and
cognitively
involved
with
the
participants
of
the
research:
on
the
watch
for
the
perception
of
the
inconvenient
aspects
of
her
presence/investigation
at
that
territory;
trying
to
find
in
the
resistances
of
the
interlocutor
some
porosity
that
could
connect
them.
The
dialogical
multiplication
was
also
a
device
to
understand
intrapsychological
conflicts.
Observing
the
researcher
ambiguity
between
the
psychological
investigative
position
and
artist’s
identification,
we
can
use
another
double-‐dialogical
scheme
as
a
device
to
understand
the
intrapsychological
tension
in
the
process
of
knowledge
construction
in
the
field
research.
Figure
2
shows
the
ambivalence
of
the
researcher
that
emerged
from
her
commitment
with
a
defined
cultural
background.
Although
the
researchers
have
planned
the
methodological
procedures
for
the
fieldwork,
her
past
experiences
intervene,
creating
unreflective,
tacit,
affective
expectancies
about
what
would
be
found
in
the
territory,
and
about
people
that
live
there.
The
commitment
with
this
cultural
field
guides
the
quest
for
knowledge
construction
to
as
far
as
the
researcher
is
able
to
take
herself
as
part
of
it.
The
intersubjective
experience
is
then
internalized
as
an
intrasubjective
14
tension
between
the
construction
of
the
investigative
object
and
the
non-‐scientific
object
of
interest
that
permeates
the
socio-‐cultural
field
(i.e.
the
circus
artist’s
interests).
Investigative
Artist’s
aims
interest
Figure 2: Dialogical multiplication as an illustration of I-‐I ambiguous positioning in field research.
ADDITIONAL
COMMENTS
Psychological
research
in
cultural
psychology
cannot
exclude
the
perspective
of
the
researcher
in
the
process
of
knowledge
construction.
On
the
contrary,
theoretical
and
methodological
issues
emerge
from
the
constructive
activity
of
the
researcher
in
his
relation
to
the
world
and
to
others,
and
operate
through
the
selectivity
from
the
analyzed
subject
and
data
(cf.
Bettoi
&
Simão,
2002;
Boesch,
2007;
Branco
&
Valsiner,
1997;
Simão,
2007;
Valsiner,
2001).
The
hermeneutic
option
of
semiotic-‐cultural
constructivism
(Simão,
2005,
2010)
is
an
alternative
in
contrast
to
the
objectivist
paradigm
in
science
(Duran,
2004).
The
researcher
has
to
account
the
genesis
and
the
process
of
the
investigative
path,
as
it
presupposes
the
affective
involvement
of
the
15
16
AUTHORS BIOGRAPHIES:
Suara
Bastos
is
currently
a
PhD
student
at
the
Institute
of
Psychology
(University
of
São
Paulo,
São
Paulo,
Brazil).
Her
current
research
addresses
conflicts
and
tensions
emerging
from
conviviality
in
the
circus,
aiming
to
understand
possible
psychosocial
vulnerabilities
and
identify
the
ways
inhabitants
of
the
circus
elaborate
conflicts
emerging
from
the
itinerancy
and
intense
conviviality
of
the
social
group.
Email:
suara@usp.br/suarabastos@uol.com.br
Danilo
Silva
Guimarães,
PhD,
is
Professor
at
the
Institute
of
Psychology
(University
of
São
Paulo,
São
Paulo,
Brazil).
He
has
been
working
with
analysis
of
Self–otherness
interactions
from
a
dialogical
semiotic–cultural
perspective
in
psychology.
His
main
focus
of
investigation
is
the
process
of
symbolic
elaborations
out
of
tensional
boundaries
between
cultural
identities
and
alterities.
Email:
danilosg@usp.br
19