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In case people don't realise that this is a joke, I've underlined and
emphasised in colour some of the key give-aways. I left out "doing discourse
analysis" because I thought this was too unimaginative. As those interested
in psychoanalytic approaches might say, It's all a bit psycho-anal, though.

 

Hope this helps

 

Best wishes

 

Tom

 

P.S. Social science researchers interested in (BNIM): the
biographic-narrative interpretive method. For a free electronic copy of the
current version of the BNIM Short Guide and Detailed Manual , just click on
<[log in to unmask]> . Please indicate your institutional affiliation and
the purpose for which you might envisage using BNIM's open-narrative
interviews, and  I'll send it straight away.

 

The BNIM Short Guide and Detailed Manual  builds on and develops ch. 6 and
12  of  my earlier textbook, Qualitative Research Interviewing: biographic
narrative and semi-structured method (2001 Sage Publications) which has a
more general approach to semi-structured depth interviewing, interpretation,
and writing-up.

 

  _____  

From: A forum for critical and radical geographers
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Sean Tanner
Sent: Monday, September 19, 2011 12:18 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Second CFP, AAG 2012: Towards a Methods of Possibility

 

Apologies for cross-postings. Please share with anyone you think might be
interested:

This session will be sponsored by the Graduate Student Affinity Group
(GSAG).

CFP, AAG 2012: Towards a Methods of Possibility

 This session invites papers that explore how the design, choice, and
implementation of methods are informed by social theory. We are mainly
interested in social theory that is characteristic of geography's synthesis
with the cultural turn (broadly collected under headings such as: Feminist,
Post-Development Theory, Subaltern Studies, Queer Theory, Actor-Network
Theory, Psychoanalitic Theory, Posthumanism, etc). As graduate students who
are interested in rethinking and renovating the methods toolbox, we hope to
gather others who, like us, find that our graduate training prepares us well
to engage with complex ideas and philosophical problems, but dedicates much
less time in the training of what exactly is to be done with these insights
in the design of our research.

 

Many scholars interested in social theory feel there are no clear
alternatives to the default of scientific positivism when formulating
research questions, writing methods chapters, and especially while writing
external funding proposals. While we feel that it has been well illustrated
that positivism pushes toward closure, toward assurance and truth, and
toward the elimination of possibility, it remains the framework for how we
typically imagine "research." On the other hand, we feel that social theory
ought to push us in the opposite direction, toward openings, toward new
ideas and questions, and toward an expansion of possibility. To this end,
this session begs the question: how can we imagine innovations in our
methods that allow for the same openings in our research that social theory
has provided us in our framing of problems?  And, just as important, how may
we justify such methods to outside funding agencies, who frequently operate
with a different set of assumptions about what research should do?

 

This session is an ideal opportunity for graduate students to present papers
and ideas about methods while in the midst of the great efforts that methods
chapters of dissertations require. Also, educators who have an interest in
graduate training and engaging in the questions above will provide valuable
insight. Topics for the paper session may include, but are not limited to
the following:

 

- Formulating techniques such as genealogy and deconstruction into a
coherent method

- Translating theoretical concepts such as overdetermination and
anti-essentialism to methods

- Doing discourse analysis

- Participatory Action Research as a method of possibility

- Visceral Geographies

- Accounting for distributed agency and non-linear causality [Alan Sokal?]

- Working through questions of ethics, epistemology, and the normative
orientation of knowledge claims

- The negotiation of professional expectations and alternative research
programs (e.g. tensions between collaborative authorship and atomistic
orientations toward "expertise")

 

Please inform us of your interest as soon as possible and plan to send
abstracts, no later than September 23, 2011, to both:

 

Sean Tanner - [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> 

Department of Geography

Rutgers University

Geoffrey Boyce - [log in to unmask] 

School of Geography and Development

The University of Arizona