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Writing Intimacy into Feminist Geography

Editat de Pamela Moss, Courtney Donovan
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 dec 2018
Intimacy, expressed through the feelings and sensations of the researcher, is bound up in the work of a feminist geographer. Tapping into this intimacy and including it in academic writing facilitates a grasping of the effects of power in particular places and initiates a discussion about how to access and tease out what constitutes the intimate both ethically and politically throughout the research process.
This collection provides valuable reflections about intimacy in the research process - from encounters in the field, through data analysis, to the various pieces of written work. A global and heterogeneous pool of scholars and researchers introduce personal ways of writing intimacy into feminist geography. ​ As authors expand existing conceptualizations of intimacy and include their own stories, chapters explore the methodological challenges of using intimacy in research as an approach, a topic and a site of interaction.
The book is valuable reading for students and researchers of Geography, as well as anyone interested in the ethics and practicalities of feminist, critical and emotional research methodologies.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780367138783
ISBN-10: 0367138786
Pagini: 260
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Introduction  1. Muddling intimacy methodologically  Part I: Methodological challenges  2. An uncomfortable position: making sense of field encounters through intimate reflections  3. ‘I’m here, I hate it and I can’t cope anymore’: writing about suicide  4. In the skin: intimate acts in economic globalization  5. Navigating intimate insider status: bridging audiences through writing and presenting  Part II: Emergent effects of including one’s own story  6. Intimate creativity: using creative practice to express intimate worlds  7. Writing/drawing experiences of silence and intimacy in fieldwork relationships  8. Open for business? First forays into collaborative autobiographical writing in extractive northern British Columbia  9. Walking the line between professional and personal: using autobiography in invisible disability research  10. Are we sitting comfortably? Doing-writing to embody thinking-with  Part III: Multiple aspects of researching intimacy  11. Accelerating intimacy? Digital health and humanistic discourse  12. To hold and be held: engaging with suffering at end of life through a consideration of personal writing  13. Inhabiting research, accessing intimacy, becoming collective  14. Intimacy, animal emotion and empathy: multispecies intimacy as slow research practice  Part IV: Analytical methods as part of writing  15. Bearing witness to geographies of life and death: intimate writing and violent geographies  16. Becoming fieldnotes  17. Hiding in the garden: autoethnography and intimate spaces  18. Death, dying and decision-making in an intensive care unit: tracing micro-connections through auto-methods  19. Places of the open season  20. Concluding remarks: intimate research acts
 

Notă biografică

Pamela Moss is a Professor in Human and Social Development, University of Victoria, Canada.
Courtney Donovan is an Associate Professor in the Department of Geography and Environment, San Francisco State University, USA.

Descriere

Conceptually, intimacy is emerging across various disciplines as a topic worthy of investigation, yet it has yet to be fully articulated in feminist geography, or geography more widely. This book expands the horizons of how intimacy is understood and approached in feminist geographic work. It argues that engaging with how to access and work with intimacy ethically and politically, in research design, in the field and in the write-up enriches research, and that organizing such individual work through the theme of intimacy can deepen the understandings feminists have of experience, knowledge, and power, and in their relationships to each other.