Turning Points in Qualitative Research: Tying Knots in a HandkerchiefYvonna S. Lincoln, Norman K. Denzin Rowman Altamira, 2003 - 496 pages This is a book of signposts, of key turning points, of Gregory Bateson's 'knots tied in a handkerchief.' Each article reproduced in this volume, edited by leading qualitative methodologists Lincoln and Denzin, represents one of these turning points in qualitative research, a revolution in the way research is conceptualized and practiced. Authority, representation, legitimation, ethics, methods, presentation, even the purpose of qualitative research, have all been transformed by these articles and the authors who penned them. Bringing together the work of scholars from Haraway to Geertz, Mead to Mishler, Clifford to Conquergood, Laurel Richardson to Miles Richardson, the editors are able trace the changes in the discipline over the past five decades. A necessary addition to the shelf of all researchers, it will also be a key textbook for training the next generation of scholars in the history and trajectory of qualitative research. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 68
Page ii
... voice , writing for the other , and the presence of the author in the text . The Crossroads series understands that the discourses of a critical , moral methodology are basic to any effort to re - engage the promise of the social ...
... voice , writing for the other , and the presence of the author in the text . The Crossroads series understands that the discourses of a critical , moral methodology are basic to any effort to re - engage the promise of the social ...
Page v
... 4 The Torture and Death of Her Little Brother , Burnt Alive in Front of Members of Their Families and the Community Rigoberta Menchú , translated by Ann Wright 1 17 22 21 47 133 73 95 The " Voice from Nowhere " Gets to Speak :
... 4 The Torture and Death of Her Little Brother , Burnt Alive in Front of Members of Their Families and the Community Rigoberta Menchú , translated by Ann Wright 1 17 22 21 47 133 73 95 The " Voice from Nowhere " Gets to Speak :
Page vi
... Voice from Nowhere " Gets to Speak : Autoethnography and Personal Narratives 5 The Way We Were , Are , and Might Be : Torch Singing as Autoethnography Stacy Holman Jones PART II : The Revolution in Authority 6 On Ethnographic Authority ...
... Voice from Nowhere " Gets to Speak : Autoethnography and Personal Narratives 5 The Way We Were , Are , and Might Be : Torch Singing as Autoethnography Stacy Holman Jones PART II : The Revolution in Authority 6 On Ethnographic Authority ...
Page 2
... are reexamined and new issues come to the fore . This is a historical moment defined by breaks from the past , a focus on previously silenced voices , a turn to performance texts , and a concern with moral discourse 2 INTRODUCTION.
... are reexamined and new issues come to the fore . This is a historical moment defined by breaks from the past , a focus on previously silenced voices , a turn to performance texts , and a concern with moral discourse 2 INTRODUCTION.
Page 3
... voices . Further challenges emerged from discourses sur- rounding the self - as - researcher and the researcher - as - self . The idea of the " voice from nowhere / voice from everywhere " was also criticized , as was the " god's - eye ...
... voices . Further challenges emerged from discourses sur- rounding the self - as - researcher and the researcher - as - self . The idea of the " voice from nowhere / voice from everywhere " was also criticized , as was the " god's - eye ...
Contents
Situated Knowledges The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective | 21 |
Toward an Afrocentric Feminist Epistemology | 47 |
Defining Feminist Ethnography | 73 |
The Torture and Death of Her Little Brother Burnt Alive in Front of Members of Their Families and the Community | 95 |
Torch Singing as Autoethnography | 105 |
The Revolution in Authority | 119 |
On Ethnographic Authority | 121 |
The Revolution of Legitimation | 139 |
Representing Discourse The Rhetoric of Transcription | 297 |
The Crisis in Purpose What Is Ethnography for and Whom Should It Serve? | 325 |
Can Ethnographic Narrative Be a Neighborly Act? | 329 |
Rethinking Ethnography Towards a Critical Cultural Politics | 349 |
The Revolution in Presentation | 373 |
Writing A Method of Inquiry | 377 |
Performing as a Moral Act Ethical Dimensions of the Ethnography of Performance | 395 |
The Theater of Ethnography The Reconstruction of Ethnography into Theater with Emancipatory Potential | 413 |
Thick Description Toward an Interpretive Theory of Culture | 143 |
Quality in Qualitative Research | 169 |
Issues of Validity in Openly Ideological Research Between a Rock and a Soft Place | 185 |
The Ethical Revolution | 217 |
Ethics The Failure of Positivist Science | 219 |
The Methodological Revolution | 239 |
Interviewing Women A Contradiction in Terms | 243 |
On the Use of the Camera in Anthropology | 265 |
Taking Narrative Seriously Consequences for Method and Theory in Interview Studies | 273 |
Foreword from Reflections The Anthropological Muse | 431 |
The Future of Ethnography and Qualitative Research | 435 |
Personal Narrative Performance Performativity Two or Three Things I Know for Sure | 439 |
Performance Personal Narratives and the Politics of Possibility | 467 |
The Anthro in Call | 485 |
Shaman | 489 |
Tango for One | 491 |
About the Editors | 493 |
Other editions - View all
Turning Points in Qualitative Research: Tying Knots in a Handkerchief Yvonna S. Lincoln,Norman K. Denzin No preview available - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
academic African-American Afrocentric analysis anthropology argue asked audience autoethnography Bateson Billie Holiday Black women Chicago Clifford Clifford Geertz concept Conquergood construction context critical critical ethnography critique cultural Denzin dialogue discourse epistemology essay ethic of caring ethical ethnodrama ethnography example experience feel Feminism feminist fieldwork Geertz gender Guba Hmong idea identity ideology interaction interpretation interview issues knowledge claims Lincoln lives Mead meaning metaphor method methodological Mienczakowski moral naïve realism neighborly objectivity paradigm participant observation participants personal narrative perspective photographs political positivist possible postmodern practice problems Qualitative Inquiry qualitative research questions reality relationships representation responsibility rhetorical Rigoberta Menchú Sage scientific social research social science sociological speech story structure subjects talk tell textual theoretical theory things Thousand Oaks tion traditional transcript triangulation truth understanding University Press validity vision voice woman writing York
References to this book
Plagiarism, the Internet, and Student Learning: Improving Academic Integrity Wendy Sutherland-Smith No preview available - 2008 |
Handbook of Physical Education David Kirk,Doune Macdonald,Mary O'Sullivan No preview available - 2006 |