Unpacking “Narrative Beginnings: A Lunchtime Conversation with Dean”

2016 ◽  
pp. 81-90
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
pp. 225-236
Author(s):  
Matthew H. Birkhold

Just as fan fiction defies narrative beginnings and endings, this book closes not with a conclusion, but with an interlude. By uncovering the widespread practice of writing fan fiction in the eighteenth century, identifying the rules governing its creation, and analyzing the competing artistic, economic, and public interests at stake, ...


2017 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 413-420 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Dubnewick ◽  
D. Jean Clandinin ◽  
Sean Lessard ◽  
Tara-Leigh McHugh

Autobiographical narrative inquiry is an approach with a specific set of methodological commitments that guide research practice, yet its place and position within the work on reflexive practice are lost or misrepresented. Reflexivity in the form of autobiographical narrative inquiries comes out of the relational ontological commitments of narrative inquiry. By inquiring into Michael’s (the first author) experience as a researcher–practitioner, the purpose of this article is to show how reflexivity, in the form of narrative beginnings, is situated in the ongoing stream of experience. It provides narrative inquirers with avenues to make clear their research justifications/puzzles, become wakeful and open in their inquiries, and support shifts in relational knowing and being. By looking back and noticing the ways stories work on us, rather than us on them, this research explores the reverberations of past experiences and the ripples that carry forward into our future inquiries.


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