Documents of Life Revisited

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archival research techniques
Arrest Photograph
autoethnography
BBC Woman's Hour
biographical
biographical analysis
Biographical Object
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Child's Handprints
critical
critical humanist narrative analysis
cultural studies approaches
Deep Red
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Good Life
humanism
interpretive
Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis
letters
Life Revisited
Lisa's Feelings
methodology
Olive Schreiner Letters
Pop Star
Postmortem Photographs
Postmortem Photography
qualitative research methods
Related Structural Dimensions
research
schreiner
Schreiner Letters
Schreiner's Comment
Semi-structured Conversational Interviews
Sheep Tail
Sholem Aleichem
social science methodology
story
Summer Carnival
tellings
UK High
UK High Education
UK High Street
Wagon Train
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781409442899
  • Weight: 589g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Jun 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The cultural and narrative turn has had a considerable impact upon research in the social sciences as well as in the arts and humanities, with Ken Plummer's Documents of Life constituting a central text in the turn towards to narrative, biographical and qualitative methodologies, challenging and changing the nature of research in sociology and further afield. Bringing together the latest research on auto/biographical and narrative methods, Documents of Life Revisited offers a sympathetic yet critical engagement with Plummer's work, exploring a range of different kinds of life documents and delineating a critical humanist methodology for researching and writing about these. A rich examination of the methods and methodologies associated with contemporary research in the social sciences and humanities, this book will be of interest to those concerned with the use and importance of biographical and narrative sources and documents of life investigations. As such, it will appeal to sociologists, social anthropologists and geographers, as well as scholars of cultural studies and cultural history, literary studies and library, archive and cultural management, social policy and medical studies.
Liz Stanley is Professor of Sociology at the University of Edinburgh and Director of its Centre for Narrative and Auto/Biographical Studies, UK. She is the author of Mourning Becomes... Post/Memory and the Concentration Camps of the South African War; Imperialism, Labour and the New Woman: Olive Schreiner's Social Theory; Sex Surveyed, 1949 to 1994: From Mass-Observation's 'Little Kinsey' to the National Survey and The Hite Reports and The Auto/Biographical I: Theory and Practice of Feminist Auto/Biography. She is co-author of Breaking Out Again: Feminist Ontology and Epistemology; and The Life and Death of Emily Wilding Davison. She is editor of Knowing Feminisms: On Academic Borders, Territories and Tribes; Feminist Praxis: Research, Theory and Epistemology in Feminist Sociology; The Diaries of Hannah Cullwick; and British Feminist Histories and co-editor of Debates in Sociology; and Men and Sex.