Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Preface
Chapter 1. A Layer Framework for a Precise, Consistent and Contributive Autoethnography
(Jim Costello, Joseph Feller, and David Sammon, Business Information Systems, Cork University Business School, University College Cork, Ireland)
Chapter 2. Close Relatives and Autoethnography: An Intimate but Problematic Relationship
(Geraldine Degabriele Pace, Independent Scholar)
Chapter 3. Collaborative Autoethnography as a Pedagogical Method: Women Family Therapists Storying Their Latin American Heritages
(Marcela Polanco, Kristen N. Garza, Adriana R. Lozano, Eleany Ochoa, Anna B. Rodríguez, Susie A. Chavarría-Torres, Psychological Services of Spanish Speaking Populations (PSSSP) Certificate, Our Lady of the Lake University, San Antonio, TX, US)
Chapter 4. A Bag of Oranges and a Communal Lunch: Intra-Action of Matter and Becoming
(Elmarie Kotzé, Te Oranga School of Human Development, Faculty of Education, University of Waikato, Aotearoa New Zealand)
Chapter 5. The Body in Autoethnography
(Anu Valtonen, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Lapland, Rovaniemi, Finland, and Minni Haanpää, Multidimensional Tourism Institute, University of Lapland, Rovaniemi, Finland)
Chapter 6. Autoethnography in the Digitalized World: Using Auto-Netnography in Analyzing Object Agency in Home Assemblage
(Henna Syrjälä, School of Marketing and Communication, University of Vaasa, Vaasa, Finland, and Anu Norrgrann, Department of Marketing, Hanken School of Economics, Vaasa, Finland)
Chapter 7. The “Author on the Run”: An Autoethnography of Digital Fiction in Online Collaborative Writing Communities
(Gabriele Rebagliati, Graduate School of Social Informatics, Aoyama Gakuin Daigaku, Tokyo, Japan, and Arvin Abejo Mangohig, College of Arts and Letters, University of the Philippines, Diliman, The Philippines)
Index
Keywords: Autoethnography, collaborative autoethnography, analytic autoethnography, evocative autoethnography, ethnography, qualitative research, research methodology, cultural research, observational research, self-narrative, introspection, data generation, reflexivity, research ethics, community membership, social interaction
The target audience for this book consists mostly of academics interested in qualitative methodologies, in particular ethnographic studies. This book is capable of attracting both academics that are more experienced, as well as those doing their doctoral or even under-graduate studies. Thus, it may be employed also among teaching materials. As the chapters of the book provide very vivid and interesting stories of cultural and societal phenomena from the angles of multiple fields of science, including business studies (marketing, management, tourism, and information systems), pedagogy, psychology and literature, it has potential to interest a broad, cross-disciplinary readership within social sciences, and arts and humanities.