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Is This Research? Productive Tensions in Living the (Collaborative) Autoethnographic Process
Author(s) -
Kelly W. Guyotte,
Nicola Sochacka
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
international journal of qualitative methods
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.414
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 1609-4069
DOI - 10.1177/1609406916631758
Subject(s) - autoethnography , unpacking , sociology , process (computing) , space (punctuation) , scholarship , work (physics) , epistemology , social science , political science , engineering , computer science , law , mechanical engineering , linguistics , philosophy , operating system
We came to collaborative autoethnography quite by accident. In this methodological paper, we consider our experiences as we embraced a new methodology, taught and researched collaboratively in an interdisciplinary space, and grappled with how we might nestle our work in a journal with no history of publishing autoethnographies—all while becoming awakened to critiques against and arguments for autoethnographic research. Our discussions are presented along with portions of our lengthy e-mail correspondences written during our research process and center on two prominent facets of our research experience: interdisciplinarity and the research process. Entangled in our methodological unpacking, we highlight “Productive Tensions” that emerged from both our collaboration and reviewer feedback that is presented alongside our discussion. Through seeing these tensions as productive, we argue that embracing diverse perspectives can serve to strengthen the depth of engagement, quality, and potential impact of (collaborative) autoethnographic research

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