6 research outputs found
Thinking with Thinking with Theory in Qualitative Research
Thinking with Theory in Qualitative Research is a direct challenge to long held traditional forms of qualitative data analysis. Defining analysis methods like coding and thematic analysis to be reductive and simplistic, Jackson and Mazzei offer an alternative account of data analysis by âplugging-inâ six poststructural theorists to data. Through interviews of two first generation academic women, Jackson and Mazzei demonstrate how researchers can employ complex theories to analyze data without relying upon traditional methods. The insightful, clear, and, at times, profound, findings of Thinking with Theory in Qualitative Research demonstrates the need for researchers to reexamine the continued reign of traditional forms of data analysis in the contexts of modern social life
Comience aquĂ, o aquĂ, no aquĂ: IntroduçÔes para repensar a polĂtica e a metodologia educativa em uma era pĂłs-verdad
This special issue takes up urgent questions about how we education scholars might think and do policy and methodology in what has come to be known as the post-truth era. The authors in this special issue grapple with questions about the roles and responsibilities of educational researchers in an era in which research and policy have lost their moorings in T/truth. Collectively they reconceptualize educational research and policy in light of post-truths, anti-science sentiment, and the global rise of right-wing populism. At the same time we editors wonder whether post-truth is given a bad rap. Could post-truth have something productive to offer? What does post-truth open up for educational research and policy? Or, is the real issue of this special issue a collective despair of our own insignificance and obsolescence in the wake of post-truth. Whatever we editors and authors aimed to do, this special issue will not be heard by post-truth adherents and partisans. Perhaps its only contribution is encouragement to stay with the troubles of a post-truth era, even as we despair the consequences of our research and policy creations.Este nĂșmero especial plantea preguntas urgentes sobre cĂłmo los acadĂ©micos de la educaciĂłn pueden pensar y hacer polĂticas y metodologĂas en una era posverdad. Los autores se enfrentan a preguntas sobre los roles y responsabilidades de los investigadores educativos en un momento en que la investigaciĂłn y la polĂtica han perdido sus amarres en V/verdad. En conjunto, reconceptualizan la investigaciĂłn y la polĂtica educativa a la luz de las posverdades, el sentimiento anticientĂfico y el auge mundial del populismo de derecha. Los editores tambiĂ©n se preguntan si a la posverdad se le da una mala reputaciĂłn. ÂżPodrĂa la posverdad tener algo productivo que ofrecer? ÂżQuĂ© abre la posverdad a la investigaciĂłn y la polĂtica educativa? O bien, Âżes el problema real de este nĂșmero especial una desesperaciĂłn colectiva de nuestra propia insignificancia y obsolescencia despuĂ©s de la posverdad? Independientemente de lo que nosotros (los editores y autores) pretendamos hacer, este nĂșmero especial no serĂĄ escuchado por los partidarios y partidarios de la posverdad. QuizĂĄs su Ășnica contribuciĂłn sea un estĂmulo para permanecer con los problemas de una era posverdad, incluso cuando nos desesperamos por las consecuencias de nuestras investigaciones y creaciones de polĂticas.Esta dossiĂȘ especial levanta questĂ”es urgentes sobre como os estudiosos da educação podem pensar e fazer polĂticas e metodologias em uma era pĂłs-verdade. Os autores se deparam com questĂ”es sobre os papĂ©is e responsabilidades dos pesquisadores educacionais em um momento em que a pesquisa e a polĂtica perderam seus laços na verdade. Juntos, eles reconceitualizam a pesquisa e a polĂtica educacional Ă luz das verdades posteriores, do sentimento anti-cientĂfico e da ascensĂŁo mundial do populismo de direita. Os editores tambĂ©m se perguntam se a verdade posterior recebe uma mĂĄ reputação. A pĂłs-verdade poderia ter algo produtivo para oferecer? O que abre a verdade depois da pesquisa e da polĂtica educacional? Ou o verdadeiro problema desta questĂŁo especial Ă© um desespero coletivo de nossa prĂłpria insignificĂąncia e obsolescĂȘncia depois da verdade posterior? Independentemente do que nĂłs (editores e autores) pretendemos fazer, esta edição especial nĂŁo serĂĄ ouvida pelos apoiadores e apoiadores da verdade posterior. Talvez sua Ășnica contribuição seja um incentivo para permanecer com os problemas de uma era pĂłs-verdade, mesmo quando nos desesperamos com as conseqĂŒĂȘncias de nossa pesquisa e elaboração de polĂticas
Performing the Black-White Biracial Identity: The Material, Discursive, and Psychological Components of Subject Formation
The purpose of this new materialist study was to examine the subject performativity of âbiracialâ individuals in an interview setting in order to disrupt the humanist assumptions of racial identity in psychological research. I also sought to promote critical resistance to subjectification to examine âraceâ without reifying participantsâ raced subjects. Four research questions guided this study: How does the researcher, researched, and interview intra-activity serve to instantiate the biracial subject? Under what material alterations to the interview process do different subjects come to be? Which subjects come to be or fail to come to be in the interview intra-action? How does purposeful entanglement function during the interview process?
In this experimental critical qualitative inquiry study, I interviewed five âblack-white biracialâ undergraduate students three times each while enacting a series of agential cuts within and between each interview. By altering the flow of material during the interviews, I provoked multiple identity instantiations and analyzed the process of subjectification/individuation. Grounded in Baradâs agential realism, and guided by Simondon, Foucault, and Butler my analysis of this data suggests that humanist models of âracialâ identity are insufficient, and findings further suggest that a posthumanist and post-qualitative account of âbiracialâ identity offers more insight into the performativity of âracedâ subjects. This research provides a path for psychological identity research to ethically evolve past the linguistic and ontological turns
Contagious Sapiosexuality: Dreaming Conference Seduction as Ethics of Qualitative Research
In this paper we engage Baudrillardâs (1979/1990) writings on seduction to âdream upâ seduction as an ethical and generative-destructive force of qualitative research. Beginning with a dreamy conference seduction, we argue that seduction keeps us qualitative researchers thinking, moving, risking, and being passionate about our work and each other. As a playful, sometimes frivolous, yet deeply terrifying process, seduction moves us beyond ourselves and into theoretical unknowns; enables us to risk ourselves in ethically listening to othersâ truths. We show and argue that conferences can be ripe spaces for the spread of contagious sapiosexuality and urge qualitative researchers to experiment and play with conference seductions
Work/Think/Play/Birth/Death/Terror/Qualitative/Research
Inspired by work/think/play in qualitative research, we centered the idea of âplayâ in a qualitative research project to explore what proceeding from the idea of work/think/play might look like and accomplish. We pursued play in an experimental qualitative inquiry over dinner one night at the 2016 Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association. Our article centers on one work/think/play inquiry three of us conducted. Through a playful account of how play unfolded in our work/think/play inquiry that evening, we explore research play as generative, deadly, and censored in the context of neoliberalism and other terrors. We reflect on what (good) play does in qualitative research, what our work/think/play/birth/death/terror/qualitative/research accomplished, if anything. Maybe research play is vital, what keeps us fit to do critical qualitative research. Yet research play moves (well) beyond normative rules of much qualitative research. Is it worth the risk? Can we know? Even after
Purposeful Entanglements: A New Materialist Analysis of Transformative Interviews
In this article, we explore transformative interviewing through the lens of new materialism. Rather than viewing transformation through a humanist perspective that centralizes a transcendent self, we draw upon Baradâs agential realism to reconsider transformation following the ontological turn. Thinking with agential realism, we engaged two interview studies, one on biracialism and one on masculinity, to demonstrate how the materiality of our interviews (e.g., research bodies, computer programs, questionnaires) intra-acted with our participants to both facilitate and hinder our attempts at transformation. We conclude by theorizing transformation as a type of purposeful entanglement that proceeds from the material-discursive intra-actions of our inquiries