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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Kitrina Douglas , David CarlessPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.500kg ISBN: 9781032692296ISBN 10: 1032692294 Pages: 254 Publication Date: 18 April 2025 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPrologue: A Mosaic of Autoethnography Pedagogy and Practice 1. “Research Group”: Democratising Pedagogy through Autoethnography 2. A Body and a Dark Hospital Room: Experiences of Death on Clinical Placements 3. Researching, Teaching and Learning from and through Autoethnography in Nursing and Health Sciences 4. Crystallising Experiences, Shaping Pedagogies: From Personal Journeys to an Autoethnographic Community in Japan 5. Autoethnography in Pharmacy Education and Practice 6. “This is How the System Works”: A Collaborative Attempt to Explore the Power of Being Systematically Non-systematic in Mentoring and Teaching Autoethnography 7. Healthcare Pedagogy, COVID Transformations, and the Operating Department Practitioner 8. Teaching and Learning (Together) to Conduct Autoethnography in Spain: A Case from the Perspective of Gender Studies 9. “The Anatomical Highlight of your First Year”: Blending the Territories of Medicine and Art through Autoethnography 10. “The Gift”: Developing Autoethnographic Practice in Psychology 11. Creating Space for Autoethnography and Auto/biography Within and Beyond the Academy 12. Learning Together: Some Jointly Constructed Reflections on a Creative Autoethnographic Doctoral Journey 13. Creative Relationships, Novel Responses and Falling in Love: Reflections on Teaching and Learning in Autoethnography Epilogue: Joining HandsReviews“There are few good books about pedagogy and autoethnography and fewer good books about interdisciplinarity and autoethnography. This book—this great book—is about both: about how teaching, supervising, researching, mentoring, and learning happen, and about the possibilities that come from joining together, collaborating with students and colleagues from a variety of disciplines to explore social life and alleviate social ills. A wonderful collection about research methods and practices, and an invaluable resource for anyone interested in the ways our experiences inform the work we do and the lives we (hope to) live.” -- Tony Adams, Caterpillar Professor and Chair, Bradley University, USA “You know when Kitrina and David collaborate together, good things are bound to happen. Come, make yourself comfortable as you experience these inspiring scholars and their students and colleagues teaching, learning, and writing about autoethnography. Take the steaming peppermint tea in the blue pottery mug that Kitrina extends to you; if you’re lucky, David will pick his guitar and sing in harmony with Kitrina. Meet the forty-two coauthors from around the world and breathe in their intimate collaborative research and writing experiences, stories, poems, and conversations. Feel the loving and caring community we can create by virtually joining hands with these interdisciplinary authors who reach out from multiple perspectives around the globe. For that is what good autoethnography does.” -- Carolyn Ellis, Distinguished University Professor Emerita, University of South Florida, USA Author InformationKitrina Douglas is an award-winning video/ethnographer, performer, storyteller, musician and narrative scholar whose research spans the arts, humanities and social sciences. Broadly, her research interests span mental health, arts-based methods and public engagement. With David Carless, she pioneered the YouTube series “Qualitative Conversations” and carried out research for a variety of organisations, including the Department of Health, Addiction Recovery Agency, Royal British Legion, Women’s Sports Foundation, UK Sport, local authority and NHS Primary Mental Health Care Trusts. She holds a professorship in narrative and performative research at the University of West London. David Carless is a researcher, writer, songwriter and musician working across health and social science. He specialises in arts-based, autoethnographic and narrative research, published widely as journal articles, books and book chapters, as well as online in multimedia forms such as films and music. David is with the School of Health and Life Sciences at the University of the West of Scotland and is an honorary professor in the Centre for Creative Relational Inquiry at the University of Edinburgh. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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