28 research outputs found

    A Place to Meet: Living with Critical Theory as a Mode of Care in Everyday Artistic Practice

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    This essay is a place where the everyday meets critical artistic practice meets theory. Within a critical artistic researcher’s everyday practice, critical theory is lived and practiced in modes that are material and felt. Building on the of critical theorists who write explicitly about their relationships with theory, three researchers write vignettes detailing small moments in their practice. The vignettes make visible the ways the everyday and critical theory interlock and show how critical artistic research asks us to consider ways of caring, being accountable, attending to, and growing sensibilities for living with critical theories

    Wandering Fests: Relational Orientations in Academic Writing

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    Based on a number of PhD workshops called Wandering Feasts, in collaboration between Monash University and Design School Kolding, this article explores academic writing as both a mode and a method of inquiry. The article both points to and performs five creative-relational orientations to alternative academic writing: Performativity in challenging dominant ways of knowing and representing knowledge in the academy; emergence as mindfully holding open ideas of purpose and destination in favour of not-knowing; reciprocity in collectively creating charged encounters that spark new ways of knowing; improvisation in building social space where we felt comfortable jamming and givenness as a fundamental playfulness in which an academic community nurtures the courage to give–of ourselves. The article is in itself a manifestation of exploration writing in a playful and loosely defined process

    Carolyn Ellis y Art Bochner: Fabricando relaciones en la investigación cualitativa

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    Carolyn ELLIS und Art BOCHNER berichten über ihre Ausbildung, ihre Interessen und ihr Engagement innerhalb der qualitativen Forschung als Ausdruck ihrer Bemühung, zu Verstehen in persönlichen Beziehungen und durch persönliche Beziehungen beizutragen. Ihr Wunsch ist es, an der Etablierung einer Gemeinschaft narrativer und autoethnographischer Wissenschaftler(innen) mitzuwirken, die sie eher als Ergänzung – denn als Ersatz – für Wissen und Wissensformen verstehen, die aus traditionelleren qualitativen und quantitativen Forschungsansätzen erwachsen. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0403284Carolyn ELLIS and Art BOCHNER tell the stories of their education, their interests in and commitment to qualitative research as a way to make meaning in and through personal relation­ships, and their passion for creating a community of narrative and autoethnographic researchers as a complement to—rather than a replacement for—the knowledge generated through more traditional forms of qualitative and quantitative research. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0403284Carolyn ELLIS y Art BOCHNER cuentan la historia de su educación, sus intereses y su compromiso con la investigación cualitativa como un medio de construir significado en y a través de las relaciones personales, y su pasión por crear una comunidad de de investigadores narrativos y autoetnográfos como un complemento, y no como un reemplazo, del conocimiento generado a través de formas más tradicionales de investigación cualitativa y cuantitativa. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs040328

    Massive and microscopic:autoethnographic affects in the time of COVID

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    This essay uses several of the prompts from the Massive::Microscopic experiment as a jumping off point for considering how affect theory and critical autoethnography offer us a framework for understanding, creating, and acting together in the time of COVID. Through stories of cloud-watching, mindfulness meditation, and other encounters with atmospheres and movements, we connect individual experiences of the pandemic to Buddhist understandings of a universal “we.” As a research practice committed to joining microscopic with macro lived experience, critical autoethnography offers a speculative method for collective reckoning with our infinitesimal selves in relation to the infinite of a pandemic

    What Would Nick T. Do?: Lessons from a Mentor

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    Mentors influence their mentees in ways that not only shape them as professionals but also as people. In this essay, we draw upon our personal experiences with Professor Nick Trujillo, who died unexpectedly in October 2012, to describe the ways we were influenced by our relationships. We include the story of a last visit three weeks before his death, an interlude, and six lessons that chart the trajectory of our journeys as students, friends, and colleagues

    Activist Affect

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