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More-than-human methodologies in qualitative research: Listening to the Leafblower
- Source :
- Qualitative Research. 22:521-541
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- SAGE Publications, 2021.
-
Abstract
- This paper explores the methodological possibilities of listening to more-than-human sounds as an entry point to critical analysis. Through attending to the sound of a leafblower as it resonates across a university campus, this article draws lines between the resonances of the leafblower, higher education, and white supremacy to explore how sounds become embedded in bodies and spaces. In addition, this article offers a methodology of listening as a process of attunement that provokes readings beyond what is immediately heard, seen, or felt. To listen to the sound of the leafblower and what it does, how it resonates is to attune to how that sound works, how it operates in the production and discourses of place. In other words, this article wonders how listening, as a methodological practice, provokes critical questions about place and space, and how sound (and particularly nonhuman or more than human sounds) functions in qualitative methodology.
- Subjects :
- geography
geography.geographical_feature_category
More than human
Higher education
business.industry
Critical race theory
05 social sciences
050401 social sciences methods
050301 education
Sound recording and reproduction
0504 sociology
History and Philosophy of Science
Active listening
Psychology
business
0503 education
Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Sound (geography)
Cognitive psychology
Qualitative research
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17413109 and 14687941
- Volume :
- 22
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Qualitative Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........25e3e2c702c555434b972b7b02630815