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Wayfaring: A Scholarship of Possibilities or Let�s not get drunk on abstraction
Author(s) -
Ann L. Cunliffe
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
m n gement
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.485
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 1286-4692
DOI - 10.3917/mana.214.1429
Subject(s) - scholarship , gatekeeping , sociology , reflexivity , epistemology , metaphor , futures studies , social science , political science , computer science , law , philosophy , linguistics , artificial intelligence
I argue that our academic work is becoming increasingly normalized through the gatekeeping activities of journal editors, funding bodies, ranking systems and so on. This is resulting in a narrowing of scholarship: of methods, of theorizing and of ways in which we write our accounts. I suggest that one way of addressing the situation is to build a more pluralistic scholarship of possibilities, one that requires us to humanify ourselves and others. I draw on anthropologist Tim Ingold’s notion of “wayfaring” as a metaphor for re-thinking how we might conduct our research as a scholarship of possibilities, and suggest this involves foresight, imagination and reflexivity.

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