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Lessons in Aging and Dying: A Poetic Autoethnography captures the
experience of being elderly and facing the end of life. The book
presents a collection of poems about life's end accompanied with
narrative commentary. Organized as 73 lessons, they can be read as
personal curiosities, momentary realizations, farcical departures,
embarrassing fears, therapeutic encounters, experiential truths,
hopeful conjectures, and inevitable destinations. This book is a
poetic inquiry that calls upon the lyrical in narrative and poetic
forms to enter its subject. It also is an autoethnography that
examines culture through the deployment of the self. Framed by
introductory and concluding remarks, the book is organized around
three developmental stages. The initial pages, "Beginnings,"
recognize the author's birth into the end, a time when he knew he
had arrived at a place beyond middle age. The middle unit, "From
Here to There," displays an unsettled settling in, driven by an
ongoing tension between resistance and acquiescence. It serves as a
transitional stage into "Endings," the final section that
anticipates death's imminent arrival and speculates about how
author might meet his end. Together, these units provide
opportunities for identification, speculation, and resistance.
Published as part of the prestigious autoethnographic series
Writing Lives: Ethnographic and Autoethnographic Narratives, and
written by one of the foremost academics in the fields of
communication and performance studies, this text is particularly
suitable for students and researchers in subjects such as
relational and family communication, gerontology and end-of-life
care, and performance studies.
Lessons in Aging and Dying: A Poetic Autoethnography captures the
experience of being elderly and facing the end of life. The book
presents a collection of poems about life's end accompanied with
narrative commentary. Organized as 73 lessons, they can be read as
personal curiosities, momentary realizations, farcical departures,
embarrassing fears, therapeutic encounters, experiential truths,
hopeful conjectures, and inevitable destinations. This book is a
poetic inquiry that calls upon the lyrical in narrative and poetic
forms to enter its subject. It also is an autoethnography that
examines culture through the deployment of the self. Framed by
introductory and concluding remarks, the book is organized around
three developmental stages. The initial pages, "Beginnings,"
recognize the author's birth into the end, a time when he knew he
had arrived at a place beyond middle age. The middle unit, "From
Here to There," displays an unsettled settling in, driven by an
ongoing tension between resistance and acquiescence. It serves as a
transitional stage into "Endings," the final section that
anticipates death's imminent arrival and speculates about how
author might meet his end. Together, these units provide
opportunities for identification, speculation, and resistance.
Published as part of the prestigious autoethnographic series
Writing Lives: Ethnographic and Autoethnographic Narratives, and
written by one of the foremost academics in the fields of
communication and performance studies, this text is particularly
suitable for students and researchers in subjects such as
relational and family communication, gerontology and end-of-life
care, and performance studies.
Writing Performance, Identity, and Everyday Life invites the reader
into Ronald J. Pelias' world of artistic and everyday performance.
Calling upon a broad range of qualitative methods, these selected
writings from Pelias submerge themselves in the evocative and
embodied, in the material and consequential, often creating moving
accounts of their topics. The book is divided into four sections:
Foundational Logics, Performance, Identity, and Everyday Life. Part
I addresses the methodological underpinnings of the book, focusing
on the 'touchstones' that inform Pelias' work: performative,
autoethnographic, poetic, and narrative methods. These directions
push the researcher toward empathic engagement, a leaning toward
others; using the literary to evoke the cognitive and affective
aspects of experience; and an ethical sensibility located in social
justice. Parts II-IV focus on artistic and everyday life
performances, including discussions of the disciplinary shift from
the oral interpretation of literature to the field of performance
studies; empathy and the actor's process; conceptions of
performance; the performance of race, gender, and sexuality; and
performances in interpersonal relations and academic circles. By
the end, readers will see Pelias demonstrate the power of
qualitative methods to engage and to present alternative ways of
being. Pelias' work shows us how to understand and feel the
evocative strength of thinking performatively.
Ronald J Pelias explores leaning as a metaphor for analyzing
interpersonal interaction. Bodies leaning toward one another are
engaged, developing the potential for long-lasting, meaningful
relationships. But this ideal is not often realized. Pelias makes
use of a wide variety of tools such as personal narrative,
autoethnography, poetic inquiry and performative writing in his
exploration of the physical space of relationships. This deeply
personal work is essential for scholars and students of qualitative
research and autoethnography.
Education without ethics, without sentiments, without heart, is
simply soulless, factual academics and nothing more. In his array
of authentic essays, Ronald J. Pelias poetically evokes the
spiritual aspects of life in a seemingly dispassionate field--the
academy. A Methodology of the Heart presents a procession of
situational compositions confronting matters such as family
relationships, student/teacher communications, and general life at
the university. In his comical yet candid book, Pelias depicts the
emotional battle for understanding and honesty within the
conventional boundaries of higher education. It introduces such
subjects as autoethnography, autobiography, personal narratives,
memoir, creative non-fiction, and performative writing. It is
absolutely a crucial addition to all book collectors with
autoethnographic or communication interests as well as to the
general reader attracted to daily life and higher education.
Education without ethics, without sentiments, without heart, is
simply soulless, factual academics and nothing more. In his array
of authentic essays, Ronald J. Pelias poetically evokes the
spiritual aspects of life in a seemingly dispassionate field--the
academy. A Methodology of the Heart presents a procession of
situational compositions confronting matters such as family
relationships, student/teacher communications, and general life at
the university. In his comical yet candid book, Pelias depicts the
emotional battle for understanding and honesty within the
conventional boundaries of higher education. It introduces such
subjects as autoethnography, autobiography, personal narratives,
memoir, creative non-fiction, and performative writing. It is
absolutely a crucial addition to all book collectors with
autoethnographic or communication interests as well as to the
general reader attracted to daily life and higher education.
Ronald J Pelias explores leaning as a metaphor for analyzing
interpersonal interaction. Bodies leaning toward one another are
engaged, developing the potential for long-lasting, meaningful
relationships. But this ideal is not often realized. Pelias makes
use of a wide variety of tools such as personal narrative,
autoethnography, poetic inquiry and performative writing in his
exploration of the physical space of relationships. This deeply
personal work is essential for scholars and students of qualitative
research and autoethnography.
Writing Performance, Identity, and Everyday Life invites the reader
into Ronald J. Pelias' world of artistic and everyday performance.
Calling upon a broad range of qualitative methods, these selected
writings from Pelias submerge themselves in the evocative and
embodied, in the material and consequential, often creating moving
accounts of their topics. The book is divided into four sections:
Foundational Logics, Performance, Identity, and Everyday Life. Part
I addresses the methodological underpinnings of the book, focusing
on the 'touchstones' that inform Pelias' work: performative,
autoethnographic, poetic, and narrative methods. These directions
push the researcher toward empathic engagement, a leaning toward
others; using the literary to evoke the cognitive and affective
aspects of experience; and an ethical sensibility located in social
justice. Parts II-IV focus on artistic and everyday life
performances, including discussions of the disciplinary shift from
the oral interpretation of literature to the field of performance
studies; empathy and the actor's process; conceptions of
performance; the performance of race, gender, and sexuality; and
performances in interpersonal relations and academic circles. By
the end, readers will see Pelias demonstrate the power of
qualitative methods to engage and to present alternative ways of
being. Pelias' work shows us how to understand and feel the
evocative strength of thinking performatively.
The Creative Qualitative Researcher is designed to help readers see
the range of possibilities of creative scholarship. The phrase
"creative qualitative researchers" points toward scholars who call
upon their literary skills to evoke the emotional and intellectual
complexity of their subjects; who deploy their vulnerable,
relational, and reflexive selves to expose and change problematic
cultural practices; and who engage their embodied ideological and
ethical sensibilities as researchers. Part I introduces chapters on
four qualitative methods: autoethnography, performative writing,
narrative inquiry and poetic inquiry. Each of these four method
chapters presents the method written in the style it features,
provides writing prompts for exploring the chapter's themes, and
offers written examples of the method. Part II, divided into four
chapters, aims to develop creative qualitative research skills
relevant to the methods discussed in Part I. Chapter 5 discusses
empathy and ethics; Chapter 6 is a primer on creative writing;
Chapter 7 identifies some alternative ideas for using the words of
others; and Chapter 8 focuses on collaborative improvisation to
compose scholarly work. Each of the chapters in Part II includes a
large number of writing exercises, prompts and strategies to assist
scholars in becoming better creative researchers. By the end of the
book, readers will know what creative research might entail and
will have a clear understanding of the methods. Working with the
various writing strategies, readers will see the potential of
creative research and gain skills for its use.
The Creative Qualitative Researcher is designed to help readers see
the range of possibilities of creative scholarship. The phrase
"creative qualitative researchers" points toward scholars who call
upon their literary skills to evoke the emotional and intellectual
complexity of their subjects; who deploy their vulnerable,
relational, and reflexive selves to expose and change problematic
cultural practices; and who engage their embodied ideological and
ethical sensibilities as researchers. Part I introduces chapters on
four qualitative methods: autoethnography, performative writing,
narrative inquiry and poetic inquiry. Each of these four method
chapters presents the method written in the style it features,
provides writing prompts for exploring the chapter's themes, and
offers written examples of the method. Part II, divided into four
chapters, aims to develop creative qualitative research skills
relevant to the methods discussed in Part I. Chapter 5 discusses
empathy and ethics; Chapter 6 is a primer on creative writing;
Chapter 7 identifies some alternative ideas for using the words of
others; and Chapter 8 focuses on collaborative improvisation to
compose scholarly work. Each of the chapters in Part II includes a
large number of writing exercises, prompts and strategies to assist
scholars in becoming better creative researchers. By the end of the
book, readers will know what creative research might entail and
will have a clear understanding of the methods. Working with the
various writing strategies, readers will see the potential of
creative research and gain skills for its use.
Performance uses the alphabet as an organizational device to
present a series of short pieces that approach performance from
multiple perspectives and various compositional strategies.
Pelias's essays, poetry, dialogue, personal narratives, quick
speculations, and other literary genres explore the key themes in
this field, encapsulating the essence of performance studies for
the novice and providing food for thought for the expert. Its
brief, evocative, and reflexive pieces introduce performative
writing as a method of research for those in performance and many
other fields.
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