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An act of subversion : night workers on the fringe of dawn - from bow-wave to deluge

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posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by James Mienczakowski, S Morgan, Lynn Smith
In our experimentation with an innovative ethnographic form, through which we have sought to challenge our readers and audiences using our research-based offerings as the basis for ethnodramatic performance interactions, we may at times have had little understanding of the full range of implications of our creativity. Professional therapists have compulsory sets of guidelines and ethical protocols to which they refer, and may draw upon the wisdom and advice of peers and mentors by thumbing through the pages of their professional bibles. In the developmental and emergent spaces of social science research, which performance ethnography and health promotion - that which we have labeled ethnodrama - occupies, we are writing the guidelines as we go. That is, we are sometimes engaged in the retrospective application of efficacy to our research products: those scripts and performances which constitute the ethnodramatic report. This then, is not a confessional tale, but a recognition of some undesirable outcomes and new responsibilities emanating from performance ethnography.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Start Page

179

End Page

194

Number of Pages

16

ISBN-10

0849320755

Publisher

CRC Press

Place of Publication

Boca Raton, Fla.

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Faculty of Education and Creative Arts; James Cook University;

Era Eligible

  • No

Number of Chapters

10

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