Naked truths: Towards a reflexive methodology in leisure research |
Journal/Book: Leisure Sci. 1999; 21: 325 Chestnut St, Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106, USA. Taylor & Francis Inc. 43-64.
Abstract: In this article, I critically reexamine what it means to be a qualitative leisure researcher Specifically I discuss three areas in which I believe the influence of positivism has distanced and detached us, thereby threatening the quality of our work. I address our failure to recognize and account for the role that our human ''selves'' play throughout the research process and how those selves subsequently shape our products; our failure to recognize and account for the role our emotions and personal experiences play in our research endeavors; and our specific data-collection and writing styles, which tend to adhere more to positivist ideals regarding how research should be conducted and reported. I argue that those things that are thought to be problematic in science need not be, and I propose that we adopt a reflexive methodology in leisure studies, a qualitative methodology more in keeping with the theoretical orientations with which we profess to be working.
Note: Article Dupuis SL, Brock Univ, Dept Recreat & Leisure Studies, St Catharines, ON L2S 3A1, CANADA
Keyword(s): emotions in research; interpretivism; qualitative research; reflexive methodology; "self" in research; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE
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