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Qualitative Research Approaches for Psychotherapy offers the reader
a range of current qualitative research approaches congruent with
the values and practices of psychotherapy itself: experience-based,
reflective, contextualized, and critical. This volume contains
fourteen compelling, challenging new essays from authors in both
the Northern and Southern hemispheres, writing from a range of
theoretical and cultural perspectives. The book covers both
established and emerging approaches to qualitative research in this
field, beginning with case study, ending with postqualitative, and
with hermeneutic, reflexive, psychosocial, Talanoa, queer,
feminist, critical race theory, heuristic, grounded theory,
authoethnographic, poetic and collaborative writing approaches in
between. These chapters introduce and explore the complexity of the
specific research approach, its assumptions, challenges, ethics,
and potentials, including examples from the authors' own research,
therapeutic practice, and life. The book is not a 'how to' guide to
methods but, rather, a stimulus for psychotherapy researchers to
think and feel their way differently into their research
endeavours. This book will be an invaluable resource to
postgraduate students, practitioners and established researchers in
psychotherapy who are undertaking (or considering) qualitative
research for their projects. It will also appeal to course tutors
and trainers looking for a volume around which to structure a
qualitative research methods course.
Qualitative Research Approaches for Psychotherapy offers the reader
a range of current qualitative research approaches congruent with
the values and practices of psychotherapy itself: experience-based,
reflective, contextualized, and critical. This volume contains
fourteen compelling, challenging new essays from authors in both
the Northern and Southern hemispheres, writing from a range of
theoretical and cultural perspectives. The book covers both
established and emerging approaches to qualitative research in this
field, beginning with case study, ending with postqualitative, and
with hermeneutic, reflexive, psychosocial, Talanoa, queer,
feminist, critical race theory, heuristic, grounded theory,
authoethnographic, poetic and collaborative writing approaches in
between. These chapters introduce and explore the complexity of the
specific research approach, its assumptions, challenges, ethics,
and potentials, including examples from the authors' own research,
therapeutic practice, and life. The book is not a 'how to' guide to
methods but, rather, a stimulus for psychotherapy researchers to
think and feel their way differently into their research
endeavours. This book will be an invaluable resource to
postgraduate students, practitioners and established researchers in
psychotherapy who are undertaking (or considering) qualitative
research for their projects. It will also appeal to course tutors
and trainers looking for a volume around which to structure a
qualitative research methods course.
Artful Collaborative Inquiry comprises essays created collectively
by a group of scholars and artists, the majority of whom have
several decades of experience of working together. The book
challenges commonly-held, individualistic beliefs about ownership,
authorship and scholarly and artistic ethics and practices. The
essays exemplify the entangled kinds of scholarly and artistic
works that emerge in a post-human world, where humans, other
species, environments, things and other matters, all matter and are
of equal concern in the conduct of ethical artful scholarship.
Situated at the (messy) crossroads where contemporary scholarship
and artistic practice converge, the seamless mo(ve)ment and
interplay between text and image make up the main body of the work
in this book. The chapters combine the playful use and merging of
time, space and place, researcher and researched, to give a unique
exemplar of research and creativity in the rapidly emerging field
of collaborative scholarship. It will be of particular interest to
creative and qualitative scholars wishing to conduct more artful
research, and artists engaging with scholarship.
Artful Collaborative Inquiry comprises essays created collectively
by a group of scholars and artists, the majority of whom have
several decades of experience of working together. The book
challenges commonly-held, individualistic beliefs about ownership,
authorship and scholarly and artistic ethics and practices. The
essays exemplify the entangled kinds of scholarly and artistic
works that emerge in a post-human world, where humans, other
species, environments, things and other matters, all matter and are
of equal concern in the conduct of ethical artful scholarship.
Situated at the (messy) crossroads where contemporary scholarship
and artistic practice converge, the seamless mo(ve)ment and
interplay between text and image make up the main body of the work
in this book. The chapters combine the playful use and merging of
time, space and place, researcher and researched, to give a unique
exemplar of research and creativity in the rapidly emerging field
of collaborative scholarship. It will be of particular interest to
creative and qualitative scholars wishing to conduct more artful
research, and artists engaging with scholarship.
This book is a passionate engagement with Gilles Deleuze and
collaborative writing, in which four writers explore together the
insights that Deleuze has contributed to the topic. This powerful
and complex text, which will appeal to scholars within qualitative
inquiry, investigates the question of how we might begin to write,
together, on what Deleuze would call an immanent plane of
composition. On such a Deleuzian plane, or plateau, the writers
seek to bond with Deleuze, to open up with him a new stream of
thought and of being.
Therapy, Stand-Up, and the Gesture of Writing is a sharp, lively
exploration of the connections between therapy, stand-up comedy,
and writing as a method of inquiry; and of how these connections
can be theorized through the author's new concept:
creative-relational inquiry. Engaging, often poignant, stories
combine with rich scholarship to offer the reader provocative,
original insights. Wyatt writes about his work as a therapist with
his client, Karl, as they meet and talk together. He tells stories
of his experiences attending comedy shows in Edinburgh and of his
own occasional performances. He brings alive the everyday profound
through vignettes and poems of work, travel, visiting his mother,
mourning his late father, and more. The book's drive, however, is
in bringing together therapy, stand-up, and writing as a method of
inquiry to mobilise theory, drawing in particular from Deleuze and
Guattari, the new materialisms, and affect theory. Through this
diffractive work, the text formulates and develops
creative-relational inquiry. With its combination of fluent
story-telling and smart, theoretical propositions, Therapy,
Stand-up, and the Gesture of Writing offers compelling
possibilities both for qualitative scholars who have an interest in
narrative, performative, and embodied scholarship, and those who
desire to bring current, complex, theories to bear upon their
research practices.
Therapy, Stand-Up, and the Gesture of Writing is a sharp, lively
exploration of the connections between therapy, stand-up comedy,
and writing as a method of inquiry; and of how these connections
can be theorized through the author's new concept:
creative-relational inquiry. Engaging, often poignant, stories
combine with rich scholarship to offer the reader provocative,
original insights. Wyatt writes about his work as a therapist with
his client, Karl, as they meet and talk together. He tells stories
of his experiences attending comedy shows in Edinburgh and of his
own occasional performances. He brings alive the everyday profound
through vignettes and poems of work, travel, visiting his mother,
mourning his late father, and more. The book's drive, however, is
in bringing together therapy, stand-up, and writing as a method of
inquiry to mobilise theory, drawing in particular from Deleuze and
Guattari, the new materialisms, and affect theory. Through this
diffractive work, the text formulates and develops
creative-relational inquiry. With its combination of fluent
story-telling and smart, theoretical propositions, Therapy,
Stand-up, and the Gesture of Writing offers compelling
possibilities both for qualitative scholars who have an interest in
narrative, performative, and embodied scholarship, and those who
desire to bring current, complex, theories to bear upon their
research practices.
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