Enclothed Knowledge: The Fashion Show as a Method of Dissemination in Arts-Informed Research

In this article, I investigate the processes, benefits and dilemmas of producing a fashion show as a method of dissemination in arts-informed qualitative research. I examine a project that used a fashion show to analyze and represent interview findings about men's understandings and performance...

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Main Author: Ben Barry
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: FQS 2017-07-01
Series:Forum: Qualitative Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/2837
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spelling doaj-23de20edd4df4b6ab1df07c7c6d918ba2020-11-25T00:03:02ZdeuFQS Forum: Qualitative Social Research1438-56272017-07-0118310.17169/fqs-18.3.28371864Enclothed Knowledge: The Fashion Show as a Method of Dissemination in Arts-Informed ResearchBen Barry0Ryerson UniversityIn this article, I investigate the processes, benefits and dilemmas of producing a fashion show as a method of dissemination in arts-informed qualitative research. I examine a project that used a fashion show to analyze and represent interview findings about men's understandings and performances of masculinities. Fashion shows facilitate the dissemination of new qualitative data—what I coin "enclothed knowledge"—which is embodied and inaccessible through static or verbal descriptions. Fashion shows also enable participants to shape knowledge circulation and allow researchers to engage diverse audiences. Despite these benefits, researchers have to be mindful of ethical dilemmas that occur from the absence of anonymity inherent in public performances and therefore I suggest strategies to mitigate these threats to research ethics. Ultimately, I argue that fashion shows advance social justice because the platform can transform narrow, stereotypical understandings of marginalized identities.http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/2837arts-based researcharts-informed researchclothingembodimentfashion showgendermasculinityparticipatoryperformance
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ben Barry
spellingShingle Ben Barry
Enclothed Knowledge: The Fashion Show as a Method of Dissemination in Arts-Informed Research
Forum: Qualitative Social Research
arts-based research
arts-informed research
clothing
embodiment
fashion show
gender
masculinity
participatory
performance
author_facet Ben Barry
author_sort Ben Barry
title Enclothed Knowledge: The Fashion Show as a Method of Dissemination in Arts-Informed Research
title_short Enclothed Knowledge: The Fashion Show as a Method of Dissemination in Arts-Informed Research
title_full Enclothed Knowledge: The Fashion Show as a Method of Dissemination in Arts-Informed Research
title_fullStr Enclothed Knowledge: The Fashion Show as a Method of Dissemination in Arts-Informed Research
title_full_unstemmed Enclothed Knowledge: The Fashion Show as a Method of Dissemination in Arts-Informed Research
title_sort enclothed knowledge: the fashion show as a method of dissemination in arts-informed research
publisher FQS
series Forum: Qualitative Social Research
issn 1438-5627
publishDate 2017-07-01
description In this article, I investigate the processes, benefits and dilemmas of producing a fashion show as a method of dissemination in arts-informed qualitative research. I examine a project that used a fashion show to analyze and represent interview findings about men's understandings and performances of masculinities. Fashion shows facilitate the dissemination of new qualitative data—what I coin "enclothed knowledge"—which is embodied and inaccessible through static or verbal descriptions. Fashion shows also enable participants to shape knowledge circulation and allow researchers to engage diverse audiences. Despite these benefits, researchers have to be mindful of ethical dilemmas that occur from the absence of anonymity inherent in public performances and therefore I suggest strategies to mitigate these threats to research ethics. Ultimately, I argue that fashion shows advance social justice because the platform can transform narrow, stereotypical understandings of marginalized identities.
topic arts-based research
arts-informed research
clothing
embodiment
fashion show
gender
masculinity
participatory
performance
url http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/2837
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