Collecting Sensorial Litter: Ethnographic Reflexive Grappling With Corporeal Complexity
In this three-part narrative paper, I put forward “collecting sensorial litter” as an innovative method for helping ethnographers reflexively grapple with complicated corporeality during fieldwork. First, I highlight the continued need for experimentation with body-based reflexive methods that can h...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406920958600 |
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doaj-18c08e9207ef4de4afd56691f16ce5182020-11-25T03:41:47ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Qualitative Methods1609-40692020-09-011910.1177/1609406920958600Collecting Sensorial Litter: Ethnographic Reflexive Grappling With Corporeal ComplexityKathleen A. Hare0 Department of Language and Literacy Education, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, CanadaIn this three-part narrative paper, I put forward “collecting sensorial litter” as an innovative method for helping ethnographers reflexively grapple with complicated corporeality during fieldwork. First, I highlight the continued need for experimentation with body-based reflexive methods that can help capture the messiness of ethnographers’ experiences, especially for sensuous, embodied forms of ethnography. Second, I use theories of intensity and embodiment to conceptualize the “too intense experiences” that are refuse/d by ethnographers’ bodies (e.g., fleeting, whirling emotions; spatial disorientations). Third, I draw upon my fieldwork to illustrate that such experiences are not lost when refuse/d, but manifest symbolically and materially as “sensorial litter.” I detail my methodological process for: A) identifying B) re-claiming and C) reflexively considering three pieces of sensorial litter. I argue the value of collecting sensorial litter includes enhancing self-communication, attending to uncomfortable power relations, and rendering visible critical data (perhaps) inadvertently thrown away in research.https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406920958600 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kathleen A. Hare |
spellingShingle |
Kathleen A. Hare Collecting Sensorial Litter: Ethnographic Reflexive Grappling With Corporeal Complexity International Journal of Qualitative Methods |
author_facet |
Kathleen A. Hare |
author_sort |
Kathleen A. Hare |
title |
Collecting Sensorial Litter: Ethnographic Reflexive Grappling With Corporeal Complexity |
title_short |
Collecting Sensorial Litter: Ethnographic Reflexive Grappling With Corporeal Complexity |
title_full |
Collecting Sensorial Litter: Ethnographic Reflexive Grappling With Corporeal Complexity |
title_fullStr |
Collecting Sensorial Litter: Ethnographic Reflexive Grappling With Corporeal Complexity |
title_full_unstemmed |
Collecting Sensorial Litter: Ethnographic Reflexive Grappling With Corporeal Complexity |
title_sort |
collecting sensorial litter: ethnographic reflexive grappling with corporeal complexity |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
International Journal of Qualitative Methods |
issn |
1609-4069 |
publishDate |
2020-09-01 |
description |
In this three-part narrative paper, I put forward “collecting sensorial litter” as an innovative method for helping ethnographers reflexively grapple with complicated corporeality during fieldwork. First, I highlight the continued need for experimentation with body-based reflexive methods that can help capture the messiness of ethnographers’ experiences, especially for sensuous, embodied forms of ethnography. Second, I use theories of intensity and embodiment to conceptualize the “too intense experiences” that are refuse/d by ethnographers’ bodies (e.g., fleeting, whirling emotions; spatial disorientations). Third, I draw upon my fieldwork to illustrate that such experiences are not lost when refuse/d, but manifest symbolically and materially as “sensorial litter.” I detail my methodological process for: A) identifying B) re-claiming and C) reflexively considering three pieces of sensorial litter. I argue the value of collecting sensorial litter includes enhancing self-communication, attending to uncomfortable power relations, and rendering visible critical data (perhaps) inadvertently thrown away in research. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406920958600 |
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