Abstract

In this article I reflect critically on my creative proposal of Research-emotion created within the framework of a feminist autoethnographic methodology in Master’s degree in gender studies thesis. Firstly, I describe the contributions of feminist autoethnography and describe both the contributions of embodied anthropology and decolonial and queer theories to do feminist research in times of pandemic. Secondly, I think about of my embodied experience to understand how I came to build my research-emotion methodology from milestones of my experience. Finally, I make a political and epistemological contribution on the readings and experiences of decolonial authors that have led me to expand my knowledge of emotions, what I call decolonial emotional epistemologies, that constitute my particular way of understanding emotions in my autoethnographic study. &nbsp

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