Search

Showing total 130 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Topic autoethnography Remove constraint Topic: autoethnography Publication Year Range Last 50 years Remove constraint Publication Year Range: Last 50 years Publisher wiley-blackwell Remove constraint Publisher: wiley-blackwell
130 results

Search Results

1. W. E. B. Du Bois as Interactionist: Reflections on the Canonical Incorporation of a Marginalized Scholar.

2. Making wardrobe space: The sustainable potential of minimalist‐inspired fashion challenges.

3. Precarious privilege in the time of pandemic: A hybrid (auto)ethnographic perspective on COVID‐19 and international schooling in China.

5. Cybersecurity's grammars: A more‐than‐human geopolitics of computation.

6. A gay reflection on microaggressions, symbolic normativities, and pink hair.

7. Connected early‐career experiences of equality in academia during the pandemic and beyond: Our liminal journey.

8. The hopes of memorial remaking: Product, process, and the temporal rhythms of making.

9. An optimal environment for our optimal selves? An autoethnographic account of self‐tracking personal exposure to air pollution.

10. Rethinking textbooks as active social agents in interpretivist research.

11. Studying stepfamilies, surfacing secrets: A reflection on the private motivations behind efforts to humanize family complexity.

12. Affectual intensities: Writing with resonance as feminist methodology.

13. Diabetes and an inescapable (auto)ethnography.

14. Militantly 'studying up'? (Ab)using whiteness for oppositional research.

15. Longing for connection: University educators creating meaning through sharing experiences of teaching online.

16. Yellow‐sticker shopping as competent, creative consumption.

17. The "colonial object" in autoethnography: Examples from Ireland, Hong Kong, and Zambia.

18. Using Playful Metaphors to Conceptualize Practical Use of ChatGPT: An Autoethnography.

19. Mental health nursing in bushfire‐affected communities: An autoethnographic insight.

20. Leaving the field: (de-)linked lives of the researcher and research assistant.

21. Journeying to visibility: An autoethnography of self‐harm scars in the therapy room.

22. Journeying with: Qualitative methodological engagements with pilgrimage.

23. Messing up research: A dialogical account of gender, reflexivity, and governance in auto‐ethnography.

24. Autoethnography and 'chimeric‐thinking': A phenomenological reconsideration of illness and alterity.

25. An autoethnography of pregnancy and birth during Covid times: Transcending the illusio of overwork in academia?

26. Creating conversations: an inclusive approach to the international networking of knowledge about education.

27. On Novice Facilitators Doing Research—Research in Problem Structuring Methods as Autoethnography.

28. Journaling the COVID‐19 pandemic: Locality, scale, and spatialised bodies.

29. Transnational TESOL Practitioners' Identity Tensions: A Collaborative Autoethnography.

30. Autoethnography: introducing 'I' into medical education research.

31. Reframing health and illness: a collaborative autoethnography on the experience of health and illness transformations in the life course.

32. Collecting, kitsch and the intimate geographies of social memory: a story of archival autoethnography.

33. Toward an Ethical Reflective Practice of a Theory in the Flesh: Embodied Subjectivities in a Youth Participatory Action Research Mural Project.

34. The experiences of medical students with dyslexia: An interpretive phenomenological study.

35. How Family Therapy Stole My Interiority and Was Then Rescued by Open Dialogue.

36. Moral dilemmas, moral reasons and moral learning: interpreting a real case in terms of particularistic theory.

37. Extending the boundaries: Autoethnography as an emergent method in mental health nursing research.

38. Fair Trade and the consumer interest: a personal account.

39. From warrior to guardian: An autoethnographic study of how consumers think about and interact with the natural world.

40. Counselor educators using self as instrument in antiracist teaching.

41. Figuring out how to participate in the system: Using reflexive feminist autoethnography to explore intersectional experiences in the professional and political spheres of academia.

42. "How did they protect you?" The lived experience of race and gender in the post‐colonial English university.

43. Beginnings and Endings: An Autoethnographic Account of Two Zanzibari Marriages.

44. Studying islandness through the language of art.

45. Exploring self‐disclosure between the survivor‐therapist and survivor‐clients: An autoethnography of the value of 'sisterhood' between female survivors of sexual violence.

46. Applied autoethnography: A method for reporting best practice in ecological and environmental research.

47. An autoethnographic exploration of a lone‐mother trainee systemic therapist.

48. Continuous quality improvement at the frontline: One interdisciplinary clinical team's four‐year journey after completing a virtual learning program.

49. Remote schooling during a pandemic: Visibly Muslim mothering and the entanglement of personal and political.

50. Colonised minds and community psychology in the academy: Collaborative autoethnographic reflections.