International Perspectives on Autoethnographic Research and Practice (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Turner, Lydia; Adams, Tony; Grant, Alec; Short, Nigel
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International Perspectives on Autoethnographic Research and Practice (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Turner, Lydia; Adams, Tony; Grant, Alec; Short, Nigel
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International Perspectives on Autoethnographic Research and Practice is the first volume of international scholarship on autoethnography.
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International Perspectives on Autoethnographic Research and Practice is the first volume of international scholarship on autoethnography.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. März 2018
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781315394770
- Artikelnr.: 53186283
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. März 2018
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781315394770
- Artikelnr.: 53186283
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Lydia Turner is Honorary Senior Lecturer in the School of Psychology at the University of Sussex, UK, and a Consultant Psychological Therapist with Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, UK. Nigel P. Short is an independent scholar affiliated with the Universities of Sussex and Brighton, UK, where he holds Associate Tutor positions. He worked in the National Health Service for 31 years, as a mental health nurse and latterly as a Cognitive Behavioural Therapist. Alec Grant is an independent scholar who, until his retirement in 2017, was Reader in Narrative Mental Health in the School of Health Sciences at the University of Brighton, UK. Tony E. Adams is Professor and Department Chair of Communication at Bradley University, USA.
Editor Biographies; Chapter Author Biographies; Foreword
Ken Gale; Foreword
Pat Sykes; Introduction: A Place to Start
Lydia Turner I. Understanding Autoethnography Outside
walking in
Nigel P. Short 1. Autoethnography as Research Redux
Norman K. Denzin 2. Telling and Not Telling: Sharing Stories in Therapeutic Spaces from the Other Side of the Room
Sarah Helps 3. Am I there yet? Reflections on Appalachian Critical Consciousness
Griselda Tilley-Lubbs 4. Defining/Challenging Constructs of Culture
Robert E. Rinehart 5. Working More and Communicating Less in Information Technology: Reframing the EVLN via Relational Dialectics
Andrew Herrmann 6. Confession
Kitrinia Douglas II. Doing and Representing Autoethnography Voice
Ethics
and the Best of Autoethnographic Intentions (Or Writers
Readers
and the Spaces In-between)
Alec Grant 7. Three Seconds Flat: Autoethnography Within Commissioned Research and Evaluation Projects
David Carless 8. Metis-Body-Stage: Autoethnographical Explorations of Cunning Resistance in Intimate Abuse and Domestic Violence Narratives Through Feminist Performance-making
Marilyn Metta 9. Getting It Out There: (Un)comfortable Truths about Voice
Authorial Intent
and Audience Response in Autoethnography
Renata Ferdinand 10. On What and What Not to Say in Autoethnography
and Dealing with the Consequences
Silvia M. Bénard 11. Where Does my Body Belong?
Keyan Tomaselli 12. For the Birds: Autoethnographic Entanglements
Susanne Gannon 13. Borders
Space and Heartfelt Perspectives in Researching the "Unsaid" about the Daily Life Experiences of the Children of Migrants in the Schools of Arica
Pamela Zapata-Sepúlveda III. Supervising
Sharing
and Evaluating Autoethnography Supervising
Sharing
and Evaluating Autoethnography
Tony E. Adams 14. The Writing Group
Laurel Richardson 15. You Never Dance Alone: Supervising Autoethnography Jonathan Wyatt with Inés Bárcenas Taland 16. Writing Lesson(s)
Robin Boylorn 17. An Autoethnography of the Politics of Publishing within Academia
Brett Smith 18. Happy Ways: The Writing Subject
Sophie Tamas 19. Creating Criteria for Evaluating Autoethnography: Pedagogical Possibilities and Problems with Lists
Andrew C. Sparkes; Assemblages
The Editors
Ken Gale; Foreword
Pat Sykes; Introduction: A Place to Start
Lydia Turner I. Understanding Autoethnography Outside
walking in
Nigel P. Short 1. Autoethnography as Research Redux
Norman K. Denzin 2. Telling and Not Telling: Sharing Stories in Therapeutic Spaces from the Other Side of the Room
Sarah Helps 3. Am I there yet? Reflections on Appalachian Critical Consciousness
Griselda Tilley-Lubbs 4. Defining/Challenging Constructs of Culture
Robert E. Rinehart 5. Working More and Communicating Less in Information Technology: Reframing the EVLN via Relational Dialectics
Andrew Herrmann 6. Confession
Kitrinia Douglas II. Doing and Representing Autoethnography Voice
Ethics
and the Best of Autoethnographic Intentions (Or Writers
Readers
and the Spaces In-between)
Alec Grant 7. Three Seconds Flat: Autoethnography Within Commissioned Research and Evaluation Projects
David Carless 8. Metis-Body-Stage: Autoethnographical Explorations of Cunning Resistance in Intimate Abuse and Domestic Violence Narratives Through Feminist Performance-making
Marilyn Metta 9. Getting It Out There: (Un)comfortable Truths about Voice
Authorial Intent
and Audience Response in Autoethnography
Renata Ferdinand 10. On What and What Not to Say in Autoethnography
and Dealing with the Consequences
Silvia M. Bénard 11. Where Does my Body Belong?
Keyan Tomaselli 12. For the Birds: Autoethnographic Entanglements
Susanne Gannon 13. Borders
Space and Heartfelt Perspectives in Researching the "Unsaid" about the Daily Life Experiences of the Children of Migrants in the Schools of Arica
Pamela Zapata-Sepúlveda III. Supervising
Sharing
and Evaluating Autoethnography Supervising
Sharing
and Evaluating Autoethnography
Tony E. Adams 14. The Writing Group
Laurel Richardson 15. You Never Dance Alone: Supervising Autoethnography Jonathan Wyatt with Inés Bárcenas Taland 16. Writing Lesson(s)
Robin Boylorn 17. An Autoethnography of the Politics of Publishing within Academia
Brett Smith 18. Happy Ways: The Writing Subject
Sophie Tamas 19. Creating Criteria for Evaluating Autoethnography: Pedagogical Possibilities and Problems with Lists
Andrew C. Sparkes; Assemblages
The Editors
Editor Biographies; Chapter Author Biographies; Foreword
Ken Gale; Foreword
Pat Sykes; Introduction: A Place to Start
Lydia Turner I. Understanding Autoethnography Outside
walking in
Nigel P. Short 1. Autoethnography as Research Redux
Norman K. Denzin 2. Telling and Not Telling: Sharing Stories in Therapeutic Spaces from the Other Side of the Room
Sarah Helps 3. Am I there yet? Reflections on Appalachian Critical Consciousness
Griselda Tilley-Lubbs 4. Defining/Challenging Constructs of Culture
Robert E. Rinehart 5. Working More and Communicating Less in Information Technology: Reframing the EVLN via Relational Dialectics
Andrew Herrmann 6. Confession
Kitrinia Douglas II. Doing and Representing Autoethnography Voice
Ethics
and the Best of Autoethnographic Intentions (Or Writers
Readers
and the Spaces In-between)
Alec Grant 7. Three Seconds Flat: Autoethnography Within Commissioned Research and Evaluation Projects
David Carless 8. Metis-Body-Stage: Autoethnographical Explorations of Cunning Resistance in Intimate Abuse and Domestic Violence Narratives Through Feminist Performance-making
Marilyn Metta 9. Getting It Out There: (Un)comfortable Truths about Voice
Authorial Intent
and Audience Response in Autoethnography
Renata Ferdinand 10. On What and What Not to Say in Autoethnography
and Dealing with the Consequences
Silvia M. Bénard 11. Where Does my Body Belong?
Keyan Tomaselli 12. For the Birds: Autoethnographic Entanglements
Susanne Gannon 13. Borders
Space and Heartfelt Perspectives in Researching the "Unsaid" about the Daily Life Experiences of the Children of Migrants in the Schools of Arica
Pamela Zapata-Sepúlveda III. Supervising
Sharing
and Evaluating Autoethnography Supervising
Sharing
and Evaluating Autoethnography
Tony E. Adams 14. The Writing Group
Laurel Richardson 15. You Never Dance Alone: Supervising Autoethnography Jonathan Wyatt with Inés Bárcenas Taland 16. Writing Lesson(s)
Robin Boylorn 17. An Autoethnography of the Politics of Publishing within Academia
Brett Smith 18. Happy Ways: The Writing Subject
Sophie Tamas 19. Creating Criteria for Evaluating Autoethnography: Pedagogical Possibilities and Problems with Lists
Andrew C. Sparkes; Assemblages
The Editors
Ken Gale; Foreword
Pat Sykes; Introduction: A Place to Start
Lydia Turner I. Understanding Autoethnography Outside
walking in
Nigel P. Short 1. Autoethnography as Research Redux
Norman K. Denzin 2. Telling and Not Telling: Sharing Stories in Therapeutic Spaces from the Other Side of the Room
Sarah Helps 3. Am I there yet? Reflections on Appalachian Critical Consciousness
Griselda Tilley-Lubbs 4. Defining/Challenging Constructs of Culture
Robert E. Rinehart 5. Working More and Communicating Less in Information Technology: Reframing the EVLN via Relational Dialectics
Andrew Herrmann 6. Confession
Kitrinia Douglas II. Doing and Representing Autoethnography Voice
Ethics
and the Best of Autoethnographic Intentions (Or Writers
Readers
and the Spaces In-between)
Alec Grant 7. Three Seconds Flat: Autoethnography Within Commissioned Research and Evaluation Projects
David Carless 8. Metis-Body-Stage: Autoethnographical Explorations of Cunning Resistance in Intimate Abuse and Domestic Violence Narratives Through Feminist Performance-making
Marilyn Metta 9. Getting It Out There: (Un)comfortable Truths about Voice
Authorial Intent
and Audience Response in Autoethnography
Renata Ferdinand 10. On What and What Not to Say in Autoethnography
and Dealing with the Consequences
Silvia M. Bénard 11. Where Does my Body Belong?
Keyan Tomaselli 12. For the Birds: Autoethnographic Entanglements
Susanne Gannon 13. Borders
Space and Heartfelt Perspectives in Researching the "Unsaid" about the Daily Life Experiences of the Children of Migrants in the Schools of Arica
Pamela Zapata-Sepúlveda III. Supervising
Sharing
and Evaluating Autoethnography Supervising
Sharing
and Evaluating Autoethnography
Tony E. Adams 14. The Writing Group
Laurel Richardson 15. You Never Dance Alone: Supervising Autoethnography Jonathan Wyatt with Inés Bárcenas Taland 16. Writing Lesson(s)
Robin Boylorn 17. An Autoethnography of the Politics of Publishing within Academia
Brett Smith 18. Happy Ways: The Writing Subject
Sophie Tamas 19. Creating Criteria for Evaluating Autoethnography: Pedagogical Possibilities and Problems with Lists
Andrew C. Sparkes; Assemblages
The Editors