Turning Points in Qualitative Research: Tying Knots in a Handkerchief

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Yvonna S. Lincoln, Norman K. Denzin
Rowman Altamira, 2003 - 496 páginas
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.

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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
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