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Autoethnography [Multiple-component retail product]

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  • Formaat: Multiple-component retail product, 1648 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 3070 g, 4 Items, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sari: Sage Benchmarks in Social Research Methods
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jun-2013
  • Kirjastus: Sage Publications Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0857027859
  • ISBN-13: 9780857027856
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Multiple-component retail product, 1648 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 3070 g, 4 Items, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sari: Sage Benchmarks in Social Research Methods
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jun-2013
  • Kirjastus: Sage Publications Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0857027859
  • ISBN-13: 9780857027856
Teised raamatud teemal:
Framed by a newly-written introductory chapter, the collection includes work which spans disciplinary boundaries, bringing together a comprehensive resource which will prove invaluable to scholars in the field. From the 1980s onwards, there has been what has frequently been described as an auto/biographical turn in the social sciences and also in the arts and humanities. Changes in conceptions of self, society and identity, post-modern, post-structural and post-colonial influences and sensibilities to name but a few have all played their part in focusing attention on to, and valorising the perceptions and experiences of the individual. Now, at a time of exciting development for the subject, this new four-volume set seeks to capture the important articles that have come out of the field over the past decades. Framed by a newly-written introductory chapter, the collection includes work that spans disciplinary boundaries, bringing together a comprehensive resource taht will prove invaluable to scholars in the field.
Appendix of Sources xi
Editor's Introduction: An Autoethnographic Preamble xxi
Pat Sikes
Volume I
Part I Origins, Antecedents of Autoethnographic Research
1 Introduction to Auto/Ethnography: Rewriting the Self and the Social
3(10)
Deborah E. Reed-Danahay
2 What Do People Do? Dani Auto-Ethnography
13(16)
Karl G. Heider
3 Auto-Ethnography: Paradigms, Problems, and Prospects
29(12)
David M. Hayano
4 From Participant Observation to the Observation of Participation: The Emergence of Narrative Ethnography
41(26)
Barbara Tedlock
5 On Auto/Biography in Sociology
67(12)
Liz Stanley
6 The Politics of Location: Where Am I Now?
79(8)
Laurel Richardson
7 What's in a Research Project: Some Thoughts on the Intersection of History, Social Structure, and Biography
87(22)
Thomas S. Popkewitz
8 Writing to the Archive: Mass-Observation as Autobiography
109(16)
Dorothy Sheridan
Part II Approaches to, and Critiques of, Autoethnographic Research
9 Autoethnography, Personal Narrative, Reflexivity: Researcher as Subject
125(50)
Carolyn Ellis
Arthur P. Bochner
10 Autoethnography: Self-Indulgence or Something More?
175(20)
Andrew C. Sparkes
11 Reconsidering Table Talk: Critical Thoughts on the Relationship between Sociology, Autobiography and Self-Indulgence
195(20)
Eric Mykhalovskiy
12 Narrative's Virtues
215(28)
Arthur P. Bochner
13 Representation, Legitimation, and Autoethnography: An Autoethnographic Writing Story
243(14)
Nicholas L. Holt
14 Judging the Quality of Qualitative Inquiry: Criteriology and Relativism in Action
257(18)
Andrew C. Sparkes
Brett Smith
15 On Auto-Ethnographic Authority
275(30)
James Buzard
16 The (Im)Possibilities of Writing the Self-Writing: French Poststructural Theory and Autoethnography
305(22)
Susanne Gannon
17 Experience and "I" in Autoethnography: A Deconstruction
327(18)
Alecia Y. Jackson
Lisa A. Mazzei
18 Doing Autoethnography
345(20)
Tessa Muncey
19 Autoethnographic Mother-Writing: Advocating Radical Specificity
365
Patty Sotirin
Volume II
20 Finding the Limits: Autoethnography and Being an Oxford University Proctor
3(16)
Geoffrey Walford
21 An Autoethnography on Learning about Autoethnography
19(20)
Sarah Wall
22 Accommodating an Autoethnographic PhD: The Tale of the Thesis, the Viva Voce, and the Traditional Business School
39(30)
Clair Doloriert
Sally Sambrook
23 Analytic Autoethnography
69(22)
Leon Anderson
24 Rescuing Autoethnography
91(4)
Paul Atkinson
25 Arguments against Auto-Ethnography
95(6)
Sara Delamont
26 Truth Troubles
101(22)
Jillian A. Tullis Owen
Chris McRae
Tony E. Adams
Alisha Vitale
27 Facts or Fictions? Aspects of the Use of Autobiographical Writing in Undergraduate Sociology
123(12)
Jane Ribbens
28 Autoethnography and Teacher Development
135(14)
Jon Austin
Andrew Hickey
29 Disability and (Auto)ethnography: Riding (and Writing) the Bus with My Sister
149(18)
G. Thomas Couser
30 Becoming a Sadomasochist: Integrating Self and Other in Ethnographic Analysis
167(24)
Staci Newmahr
31 Death and Memory: From Santa Maria del Monte to Miami Beach
191(42)
Ruth Behar
32 Turning toward Tincup: A Story of a Home Death
233(14)
Joyce L. Hocker
33 Autoethnography: An Overview
247
Carolyn Ellis
Tony E. Adams
Arthur P. Bochner
Volume III
Part III Ethical Concerns around Autoethnography
34 A Note on Ethical Issues in the Use of Autobiography in Sociological Research
3(10)
Barbara Harrison
E. Stina Lyon
35 Telling Secrets, Revealing Lives: Relational Ethics in Research with Intimate Others
13(24)
Carolyn Ellis
36 A Review of Narrative Ethics
37(20)
Tony E. Adams
37 The Ethics of Writing Life Histories and Narratives in Educational Research
57(14)
Pat Sikes
38 Caught with a Fake ID: Ethical Questions about Slippage in Autoethnography
71(10)
Kristina Medford
39 A Critique of Current Practice: Ten Foundational Guidelines for Autoethnographers
81(20)
Martin Tolich
40 Handing IRB an Unloaded Gun
101(14)
Carol Rambo
41 With Mother/With Child: A True Story
115(20)
Carolyn Ellis
42 Sexual Involvement and Social Research in a Fat Civil Rights Organization
135(38)
Erich Goode
Part IV Writing and Re-presenting Autoethnographic Research
43 Writing: A Method of Inquiry
173(36)
Laurel Richardson
44 A Gentle Going? An Autoethnographic Short Story
209(10)
Jonathan Wyatt
45 Psychic Distance, Consent, and Other Ethical Issues: Reflections on the Writing of "A Gentle Going?"
219(6)
Jonathan Wyatt
46 Goin' to the Store, Sittin' on the Street, and Runnin' the Roads: Growing Up in a Rural Southern Neighborhood
225(16)
Carolyn Ellis
47 Writing Like a Guy in Textville: A Personal Reflection on Narrative Seduction
241(18)
H.L. Goodall, Jr.
48 Revealing and Concealing Secrets in Research: The Potential for the Absent
259(18)
Brian Rappert
49 Easier Said Than Done: Writing an Autoethnography
277(20)
Sarah Wall
50 The Academic Tourist: An Autoethnography
297(6)
Ronald J. Pelias
51 Narrative and the Re/Production of Transsexual: The Foreclosure of an Endured Emergence of Gender Multiplicity
303(16)
Jodi Kaufmann
52 Multiple Reflections of Child Sex Abuse: An Argument for a Layered Account
319(24)
Carol Rambo Ronai
53 Autoethnographic Layering: Recollections, Family Tales, and Dreams
343(12)
Jean Rath
54 Performative Autoethnography: Critical Embodiments and Possibilities
355(26)
Tami Spry
55 Indians in the Park
381(24)
Norman K. Denzin
56 Mothers Talk about Their Children with Schizophrenia: A Performance Autoethnography
405(14)
B. Schneider
57 Postcards from Pigtown
419(24)
Michael Silk
58 The Accusing Body
443(8)
Tami Spry
59 Standing Center: Autoethnographic Writing and Solo Dance Performance
451
Karen Nicole Barbour
Pat Sikes is a professor of qualitative inquiry in the School of Education, University of Sheffield. She became interested in narrative auto/biographical approaches in the late 1970s and throughout her career has undertaken research which has used them to investigate topics around teachers lives and careers and, from 2014, the perceptions and experiences of children and young people who have a parent with a young onset dementia. Research ethics are another key concern and focus of Pats work. In 2018, the British Educational Research Association awarded her the John Nisbet Fellowship for an outstanding contribution to educational research over a career.