Note: blog now also available on
Methodspace as
"We passionately
believe that as narrative researchers and storytellers we must promote
narrative in the content and styles of our publications. To revert to a style
of publication or presentation that is counter to this does a disservice to our
commitments as narrativists".
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Lee-Ann Fenge & Kip Jones |
Kip Jones and Lee-Ann Fenge are pleased to announce that our article now appearing in Creative Approaches to Research,
a peer-reviewed open-access journal, “Gift Stories How Do We Retell the Stories that Research Participants Give Us?” is now available.
We can no longer afford to ignore the great advances made in
representation of qualitative data. These have been overwhelmingly
demonstrated by the successes achieved in auto-ethnography, poetic
enquiry, ethno-drama, film, Performative Social Science and/or other
arts-based efforts in research and dissemination.
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Narrative methods contribute greatly to the
advances made in qualitative research. A narrative style should also be
promoted in publications and presentations. A study on older LGBT citizens in
rural Britain highlights this by means of a report on one part of that study—a
Focus Group.
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Narrative researchers are natural
storytellers and need to foreground this when reporting studies for
publication. Qualitative research is always about story
reporting and story making, and narrative research (listening to and retelling
stories) is a key democratising factor in qualitative social science research.
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