Poetry in motion: Qualitative analysis, I-poems and disabled cyclists

In this article, I present three I-poems from a larger research project in which I explore the health, identity and social impacts of cycling for people with physical disabilities. I used I-poems as a means of kick-starting an in-depth, multi-perspective engagement with my interview transcripts afte...

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Main Author: Kay Inckle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-06-01
Series:Methodological Innovations
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799120924980
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spelling doaj-16f0efb70ad543f69605add51b2d03fa2020-11-25T03:19:00ZengSAGE PublishingMethodological Innovations2059-79912020-06-011310.1177/2059799120924980Poetry in motion: Qualitative analysis, I-poems and disabled cyclistsKay InckleIn this article, I present three I-poems from a larger research project in which I explore the health, identity and social impacts of cycling for people with physical disabilities. I used I-poems as a means of kick-starting an in-depth, multi-perspective engagement with my interview transcripts after struggling to formulate insightful and productive thematic analysis. For me, this research project is something of a departure from my normal research processes and practices as it is taking place in partnership with a voluntary organisation. This organisation facilitated the recruitment of the research participants and had specific inputs into the research questions as well as maintaining ongoing interests in the research findings. My usual research tends to be much less structured and much more exploratory and messy than this. And yet, for me, this messiness facilitates insight and creative engagement which is intensely productive in terms of both findings and outputs – often via the use of creative methods. Therefore, as much as I have enjoyed conducting the research for this project and liaising with the organisation and meeting the participants, I struggled to find my ‘researcher mojo’ when working with the transcripts. In this context, I-poems became a creative stimulant for productive engagement with the transcripts and deepening my critical and reflective insights into the data.https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799120924980
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kay Inckle
spellingShingle Kay Inckle
Poetry in motion: Qualitative analysis, I-poems and disabled cyclists
Methodological Innovations
author_facet Kay Inckle
author_sort Kay Inckle
title Poetry in motion: Qualitative analysis, I-poems and disabled cyclists
title_short Poetry in motion: Qualitative analysis, I-poems and disabled cyclists
title_full Poetry in motion: Qualitative analysis, I-poems and disabled cyclists
title_fullStr Poetry in motion: Qualitative analysis, I-poems and disabled cyclists
title_full_unstemmed Poetry in motion: Qualitative analysis, I-poems and disabled cyclists
title_sort poetry in motion: qualitative analysis, i-poems and disabled cyclists
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Methodological Innovations
issn 2059-7991
publishDate 2020-06-01
description In this article, I present three I-poems from a larger research project in which I explore the health, identity and social impacts of cycling for people with physical disabilities. I used I-poems as a means of kick-starting an in-depth, multi-perspective engagement with my interview transcripts after struggling to formulate insightful and productive thematic analysis. For me, this research project is something of a departure from my normal research processes and practices as it is taking place in partnership with a voluntary organisation. This organisation facilitated the recruitment of the research participants and had specific inputs into the research questions as well as maintaining ongoing interests in the research findings. My usual research tends to be much less structured and much more exploratory and messy than this. And yet, for me, this messiness facilitates insight and creative engagement which is intensely productive in terms of both findings and outputs – often via the use of creative methods. Therefore, as much as I have enjoyed conducting the research for this project and liaising with the organisation and meeting the participants, I struggled to find my ‘researcher mojo’ when working with the transcripts. In this context, I-poems became a creative stimulant for productive engagement with the transcripts and deepening my critical and reflective insights into the data.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799120924980
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