This blog is created to support conversation generated from and about the learning process for MA Professional Practice (MAPP) in the Faculty of Arts and Creative Industries (ACI) at Middlesex University.

Monday, 3 December 2018

Narrative Inquiry and Ethnography: where am ‘I’ !!

MAPP acknowledges that ‘I’ am in the situation through the qualitative nature of the methods you are encouraged to use, such as  Ethnography. Ethnography acknowledges a place for the ‘I’ in research. Narrative inquiry acknowledges the problem that the ethnographic endeavour encounters as it attempts to represent and communicate my embodied experience. 

The courses encouragement of the use of ethnography and narrative inquiry originates in an interest in better understanding the conditions of experience or embodied experience. Ethnography and narrative inquiry are used to acknowledge attempts to communicate across the isolation and immediacy of empirical agency (feeling). 

Ethnography and the narrative turn also allows your essay (for example) to acknowledge the Reader who similarly plays a role in the translation of meaning having their own continuity of experiences as they interact with the activity of reading of your work. In other words, ‘you’ are writing to someone about what you think. 

However, neither ‘ethnography’ nor ‘narrative’ are standardised terms therefore let us take a moment to define how they are used here. Classic Ethnography has its roots in nineteenth century anthropological research (Hammersley et al. 2007). Researchers such as Robert E. Parks and Frederic Milton, within what is now known as the Chicago school (1920 to 1950) began to question the location of ‘other’ cultures. As they started exploring groups within their own country and communities, they also gave ethnography a broader scope. 

The inferences of subject / object (observer / observed) of early ethnographic study were replaced by the idea we are all a part of an event. An idea that resonated with methods for allowing for the embodied in research. Today ethnography covers a range of approaches but central to them all is the researcher’s voice, thoughts and experiences being present in the data. The use of ethnography in research can acknowledge that ‘I’ am not an impartial observer but ‘I’ feeland this becomes a part of the situation/event (Clifford et al. 1986). To do this you can use your own reflective notes as part of the data and cite them in the same way you would cited participants’ notes or verbal comments. You also need to use first person throughout your work on MAPP.

Likewise, the narrative turnhas broadened from its early beginnings in 1900s where researchers attempted to give ‘objective’ accounts of events. As narrative became a credible method in research it retrospectively became a vehicle for the voice of the ‘other’.  The documentary voice of women and those who had colonising imposed on them had been captured in narrative accounts in the past and the development of narrative inquiry method gave new legitimacy to these accounts. (Clandinin and Connelly 2000;  Denzin and Lincoln 2000). Feminist theory particularly saw the significance of rethinking historical and social constructions by considering whose voice describes events and situations (Clifford et al. 1986;  Strathern 1995).

In the late twentieth century the notion of narrative inquiry was further interrogated by a crisis of representation that generated exploration into experimental writing pushing the boundaries of narrative by raising questions about how researchers can attempt to engage with ‘truth’ within a non-positivist paradigm. Within sports science and dance the problem of capturing the embodied experience is highlighted by the dualist informed divide between words and actions that a range of experimental narrative strategies attempt to address (Sparkes 2002). (i.e. they attempt to present the felt within the experience – this is why we ask for an artefact as well as straight written essay more than one way of explaining the complex experience of doing something - in the case of the final artefact case the experience of doing the inquiry.)

Bibliography
Clandinin, D. J. and Connelly, F. M. (2000) Narrative inquiry : experience and story in qualitative research,Jossey-Bass education series, 1st ed.,San Francisco, Calif.:Jossey-Bass.

Clifford, J., Marcus, G. E. and School of American, R. (1986) Writing culture : the poetics and politics of ethnography,School of American Research advanced seminar series,Berkeley, CA ; London:University of California Press.

Denzin, N. K. and Lincoln, Y. S. (2000) The handbook of qualitative research, 2nd ed.,Thousand Oaks, Calif. ; London:Sage.


Hammersley, M., Atkinson, P. and dawsonera (2007) Ethnography : principles in practice, 3rd ed.,London:Routledge.

Sparkes, A. C. (2002) Telling tales in sport and physical activity : a qualitative journey,Champaign, IL:Human Kinetics.

Strathern, M. E. (1995)Shifting contexts : transformations in anthropological knowledge,Routledge.

Sunday, 2 December 2018

Knowledges ... (AM discussion group conversation)

AM conversation journey:

We made statements about communication of ideas (the topic of the discussion for today): 
  • Ideas build a community – the responses back 
  • There is a ‘Code’ used that is built up between the people communicating
  • You have to reflect on and find the best ways to communicate your ideas to the ‘communicated’ 
We talked a bit ….
 ..And a bit more…. Cultures have particular ways to communicate and particular values in the languages they use…

We touched on things …

…We came to the University is a culture. Therefore,
  • There is a community the university expects you to engage with (one of the members of that community is the literature). Understanding that community is part of having an MA.  
  • There is a particular ‘code’ (format lexicon) the university expects you to use 
  • You have to work at the best way to communicate your ideas within the relationship of the being ‘in the university’. In a way you are responding to the culture of the university.

The 'Professional Artefact' in Module Three throws the doors open on this an allows you to communicate using your professional community as the starting point.

But regardless of what community of people all looking at dance that you are communicating with you need to balance their needs and expectation with your own values. You need to question how you communicate what is being looked for buy the community with what you can’t leave out of the communication because of your own values and come to some justification for the route you take in your communication (essay, plan etc…) 

At MA level you are not doing something just because you are being told to do it. In writing your essay to hand-in it has to be more than doing it because you were told to do it that way. The essay has to involve an understanding of the community you are communicating to (the university). The understanding has to happen in order for you to negotiate what values and codes you use in the essay. Therefore the essay itself displays an understanding of University MA level culture. The ability to communicate something (anything) displays an understanding and a negotiation between yourself and the community of the ‘academic’.  There is an art to this. 

…the above suggests that the content is only part – showing you understand something is not just the context  it is embedded in being able to choose the appropriate modes for communicating it to the community you are in conversation with. 

We ended re-igniting our inner  ‘question-everything-flames 


Maria suggested if dance is a shape (like the picture) then there are groups of people looking at it through different facets (sides) of the shape. Just because you are not used to looking at dance through a particular side doesn’t mean part of the construction of dance isn’t also that facet. You might have looked at dance through one facet for a long time and now looking at it (for instance) through a dance-scholar facet is not what you are used to but in doing this you come to know the whole stone (dance) better. What makes it beautiful is there is more than facet to it. 
Please comment below ...


See below to for links to other peoples posts on the conversation too