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  2. Autoethnography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoethnography

    Also, autoethnography as a genre frees us to move beyond traditional methods of writing, promoting narrative and poetic forms, displays of artifacts, photographs, drawings, and live performances (Cons, p. 449). Denzin says autoethnography must be literary, present cultural and political issues, and articulate a politics of hope.

  3. Visual autoethnography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_autoethnography

    Visual autoethnography has been noted by various scholars as a methodology which challenges power relations for the maker and the viewer. [1] [3] [4] Drawing on the work of Mary Louise Pratt and bell hooks in his research on gang photography, Richard T. Rodríguez refers to the autoethnography as "a practice in which colonized subjects turn the gaze inward."

  4. Autotheory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autotheory

    Autotheory is a literary tradition involving the combination of the narrative forms of autobiography, memoir, and critical theory.Works of autotheory involve a first-person account of an author’s life blended with research investigations.

  5. Alternative education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_education

    Alternative education grew up in response to the establishment of standardized and compulsory education over the last two to three centuries. Educators including Jean-Jacques Rousseau, [3] Swiss humanitarian Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi; the American transcendentalists Amos Bronson Alcott, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau; founders of progressive education John Dewey and Francis ...

  6. Emic and etic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emic_and_etic

    [8] [9] Carl Jung, a Swiss psychoanalyst, is a researcher who took an emic approach in his studies. Jung studied mythology, religion, ancient rituals, and dreams, leading him to believe that there are archetypes that can be identified and used to categorize people's behaviors. Archetypes are universal structures of the collective unconscious ...

  7. Arthur P. Bochner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_P._Bochner

    The Arthur P. Bochner Award is given annually to the top doctoral student in Communication at the University of South Florida.. The Ellis-Bochner Autoethnography and Personal Narrative Research Award is given annually by the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction affiliate of the National Communication Association for the best article, essay, or book chapter in autoethnography and ...

  8. Online ethnography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_ethnography

    Online ethnography (also known as virtual ethnography or digital ethnography) is an online research method that adapts ethnographic methods to the study of the communities and cultures created through computer-mediated social interaction.

  9. Ethnology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnology

    Compared to ethnography, the study of single groups through direct contact with the culture, ethnology takes the research that ethnographers have compiled and then compares and contrasts different cultures.