New writing practices in qualitative research |
Journal/Book: Sociol Sport J. 2000; 17: 1607 N Market St, Champaign, IL 61820-2200, USA. Human Kinetics Publ Inc. 5-20.
Abstract: New writing practices in qualitative research include evocative writing-a research practice through which we can investigate how we construct the world, ourselves, and others, and how standard objectifying practices of social science unnecessarily limit us and social science. Evocative representations do not take writing for granted but offer multiple ways of thinking about a topic, reaching diverse audiences, and nurturing the writer. They also offer an opportunity for rethinking criteria used to judge research and reconsidering institutional practices and their effects on community. Language is a constitutive force, creating a particular view of reality and the Self. No textual staging is ever innocent (including this one). Styles of writing are neither fixed nor neutral but reflect the historically shifting domination of particular schools or paradigms. Social scientific writing, like all other forms of writing, is a sociohistorical construction, and, therefore, mutable.
Note: Article Richardson L, Ohio State Univ, Dept Sociol, Columbus,OH 43210 USA
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