Description
Awarded the 2022 American Educational Studies Association Critics' Choice Book Award.
Centering Diverse Bodyminds in Critical Qualitative Inquiry directly responds to the call for engaging in a new critical qualitative inquiry with consideration to issues related to power, privilege, voice, identity, and agency, while examining the hegemonic power of ableism and ableist epistemologies.
The contributing authors of this edited volume advance qualitative methods and methodological discussions to a place where disability embodiment and the lived experience of disability are potential sources of method and methodological advancement. Accordingly, this book centers disability, and, in so doing, examines methodological challenges related to normative and ableist assumptions of doing qualitative research. The range of chapters included highlights how there is no singular answer to questions about qualitative method and methodology; rather, the centering of diverse bodyminds complicates the normative desire to create method/methodology that is "standard," versus thinking about method and methodology as fluid, emerging, and disruptive.
As an interdisciplinary text on critical qualitative research and disability studies with an international appeal, Centering Diverse Bodyminds in Critical Qualitative Inquiry is valuable for graduate level students and academics within a broad range of fields including critical qualitative research methodologies and methods, disability studies, cultural studies, discourse studies, education, sociology, and psychology. Disciplines that engage in the teaching of qualitative research methodologies and methods, particularly those that foreground critical qualitative research perspectives, will also find the book appealing.
Author: Jessica Nina Lester
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 05/06/2021
Pages: 96
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 0.61lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.50w x 0.31d
ISBN13: 9780367470869
ISBN10: 0367470861
BISAC Categories:
- Psychology | Research & Methodology
- Social Science | Research
- Political Science | Public Policy | Social Services & Welfare
About the Author
Jessica Nina Lester, PhD is an associate professor of inquiry methodology in the School of Education at Indiana University, Bloomington. Much of her scholarship focuses on methodological concerns at the intersection of discourse and conversation analysis and disability studies. She has most recently published in journals such as Qualitative Inquiry, Qualitative Research in Psychology, and Discourse Studies. Most recently, she co-authored a book with Sage publications titled Doing Qualitative Research in a Digital World.
Emily A. Nusbaum, PhD currently teaches at Mills College and University of San Diego. She has worked in teacher education and special education departments, has taught undergraduate and graduate level courses in disability studies in education and interdisciplinary disability studies, as well as qualitative research methods. Her research focuses on the advancement of critical, qualitative research through the centering of disability and disabled researchers, the ideology of inclusive education, and the experiences of post-secondary students who identify as disabled. Emily is invested in supporting individuals and families in accessing general education and higher education environments, which they have historically been denied access to.
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