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Leaning: A Poetics of Personal Relations [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 239 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 521 g
  • Sari: Writing Lives: Ethnographic Narratives
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Mar-2011
  • Kirjastus: Left Coast Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1598746405
  • ISBN-13: 9781598746402
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 239 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 521 g
  • Sari: Writing Lives: Ethnographic Narratives
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Mar-2011
  • Kirjastus: Left Coast Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1598746405
  • ISBN-13: 9781598746402
Teised raamatud teemal:
Explore with Ronald Pelias the physical space between people, and learn the metaphorical importance of leaning, in this personal, performative narrative about relationships.


Ronald J Pelias explores leaning as a metaphor for analyzing interpersonal interaction. Bodies leaning toward one another are engaged, developing the potential for long-lasting, meaningful relationships. But this ideal is not often realized. Pelias makes use of a wide variety of tools such as personal narrative, autoethnography, poetic inquiry and performative writing in his exploration of the physical space of relationships. This deeply personal work is essential for scholars and students of qualitative research and autoethnography.

Arvustused

"...Reading Ron Pelias's autoethnographic poems, stories, and essays, I feel as though I have been invited to sit down on a comfortable couch, by a crackling fire, wine in hand, with a good friend. Ron takes me into his confidences as he tells about his life and relationships, those he's been in as well as those he has observed. I become aware of presence and absence. I feel the touch of a hand, see a side glance, hear a word spoken, or not, the silences both calming and deadly. I lean in, listen, sense, and tell back my stories. You too will recognize yourself in Ron's stories and poems as you confront the power of languaging, the complexities of communicating, the expectations of masculinity, the care and danger in holding and letting go of friends, lovers, and family members. You will feel connected, held, leaned into, as though Ron is writing to and about you--your passions, frustrations, victories in relating; to and about you--disappointing others, getting along, leaning in, and trying to learn how to love and accept the love of others."...- Carolyn Ellis, University of South Florida "Pelias uses autoethnography, poetic inquiry, performative writing, and personal narrative to describe how bodies move--lean--together, placing themselves "in relationship to other bodies"...he encourages us to listen and be mindful of our relational ties, to understand the "fragility of connection," and to never give up trying to figure out what and who matters." --Tony E. Adams, Northeastern Illinois University

Preface: Leaning Into a Beginning 9(8)
Part I Languaging Relationships
17(44)
Chapter 1 Some Substantiated and Unsubstantiated Claims for Communication
19(4)
Chapter 2 Relational Language: A Poetic Sense-Making
23(14)
Chapter 3 Struggling for Speech
37(6)
Chapter 4 Relational Associations
43(12)
Chapter 5 Stephen Dunn and the Poetics of Living
55(6)
Part II Listening to Myself and Others
61(44)
Chapter 6 Self-Portrait: Standing on a Nail
63(6)
Chapter 7 Reading Barthes as a Lover
69(10)
Chapter 8 Walking and Writing with Laurel Richardson: A Story in Poems
79(13)
Chapter 9 Three Tales of Understanding
92(13)
Part III Watching Men
105(42)
Chapter 10 Making My Masculine Body Behave
107(11)
Chapter 11 Jarheads, Girly Men, and the Pleasures of Violence
118(16)
Chapter 12 A Personal History of Lust on Bourbon Street
134(13)
Part IV Holding Friends and Lovers
147(38)
Chapter 13 The Pull and Push of Friendship
149(9)
Chapter 14 Evidence of Love
158(9)
Chapter 15 Relational Development and Deterioration: Some More of the Story
167(14)
Chapter 16 Holding Mimi
181(4)
Part V Carrying Family
185(42)
Chapter 17 Family Lessons
187(10)
Chapter 18 Stories We Do and Do Not Tell
197(6)
Chapter 19 Remains
203(11)
Chapter 20 Loss
214(13)
Afterword: Leaning Into a Way of Being 227(4)
References 231(5)
Index 236(3)
About the Author 239
Ronald J. Pelias