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E-grāmata: SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research

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  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781071836767

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This new edition of the SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research represents the sixth generation of the ongoing conversation about the discipline, practice, and conduct of qualitative inquiry. As with earlier editions, the Sixth Edition is virtually a new volume, with 27 of the 34 chapters representing new topics or approaches not seen in the previous edition, including intersectionality; critical disability research; postcolonial and decolonized knowledge; diffraction and intra-action; social media methodologies; thematic analysis, collaborative inquiry from the borderlands; qualitative inquiry and public health science; co-production and the politics of impact; publishing qualitative research; and academic survival. Authors in the Sixth Edition engage with questions of ontology and epistemology, the politics of the research act, the changing landscape of higher education, and the role qualitative researchers play in contributing to a more just, egalitarian society.

To mark the Handbooks 30-year history, we are pleased to offer a bonus PART VI in the eBook versions of the Sixth Edition: this additional section brings together and reprints ten of the most famous or game-changing contributions from the previous five editions. You can bundle the print + eBook version with bundle ISBN: 978-1-0719-2874-5.

Recenzijas

"This is a great book, and they have done a great job evolving the contents through all these years. We are deeply indebted to the authors, whose knowledge and experience has enriched the field of research." -- Masoud Ghaffari

Advisory Board v
Preface xxix
Acknowledgments xliii
Editor Bios xlv
Contributor Bios xlvii
Chapter 1 Introduction: The Discipline and Practice of Qualitative Research
1(28)
Norman K. Denzin
Yvonna S. Lincoln
Michael D. Giardina
Gaile S. Cannella
Interpretive Communities--Past, Present, and Into the Future
4(4)
Mapping Qualitative Inquiry
4(2)
History, Politics, and Paradigms
6(2)
Toward a New Paradigm Dialog(s)
8(3)
Performance, Affect, and the New Materialisms
9(2)
Resistances to Qualitative Studies
11(1)
Historical Moments
12(2)
Definitional Issues: Research Versus Inquiry
14(2)
The Qualitative Researcher-as-Bricoleur
16(1)
Qualitative Research as a Site of Multiple Interpretive Practices
17(1)
Politics and Reemergent Scientism
18(1)
The Pragmatic Criticisms of Antifoundationalism
19(1)
Qualitative Research as Process
19(1)
The "Other" as Research Subject
20(1)
Part I Locating the Field
21(1)
Part II Philosophies of Inquiry
22(1)
Part III Practices of Inquiry
23(1)
Part IV Political Considerations
24(1)
Part V Into the Future
25(1)
Notes
26(3)
PART I LOCATING THE FIELD
29(84)
Chapter 2 A History of Qualitative Inquiry in Social and Educational Research
33(28)
Frederick Erickson
Origins of Qualitative Research
33(6)
The Emergence of Ethnography
35(2)
Adding Point of View
37(2)
A "Golden Age" of Realist Ethnography
39(2)
Crises in Ethnographic Authority
41(9)
Qualitative Inquiry in Educational Research
48(2)
The Current Scene
50(8)
Conclusion
58(1)
Discussion Questions
59(1)
Note
59(2)
Chapter 3 Ethics, Research Regulations, and Critical Qualitative Science
61(14)
Gaile S. Cannella
Yvonna S. Lincoln
Constructing Critical Ways of Being
64(3)
Ethics, Critical Qualitative Science, and Institutionalized Forms of Governmentality
67(4)
Transforming Regulations: Redefining the Technologies That Govern Us
71(2)
Discussion Questions
73(1)
Notes
74(1)
Chapter 4 Paradigmatic Controversies, Contradictions, and Emerging Confluences, Revisited
75(38)
Yvonna S. Lincoln
Susan A. Lynham
Egon G. Guba
Major Issues Confronting All Paradigms
76(23)
Axiology
80(18)
Accommodation, Commensurability, and Cumulation
98(1)
Cumulation
99(1)
The Call to Action
99(2)
Control
100(1)
Foundations of Truth and Knowledge in Paradigms
101(7)
Validity: An Extended Agenda
103(2)
Whither and Whether Criteria
105(1)
Validity as Authenticity
106(1)
Validity as Resistance and as Poststructural Transgression
107(1)
Other "Transgressive" Validities
107(1)
Validity as an Ethical Relationship
108(1)
Voice, Reflexivity, and Postmodern Textual Representation
108(2)
Voice
108(1)
Reflexivity
109(1)
Postmodern Textual Representations
110(1)
A Glimpse of the Future
111(1)
Notes
112(1)
PART II PHILOSOPHIES OF INQUIRY
113(194)
Chapter 5 Feminist Inquiry
123(14)
Bronwyn Davies
Why Is Feminist Inquiry and Feminist Action Still Necessary?
123(2)
What Is Feminist Inquiry?
125(2)
Current Frustrations/Actions/Protests/Joys
127(1)
The Formation of Gendered Identities
128(1)
Who Will Count as Human?
129(2)
Six Principles for Asking Questions and Developing Strategies of Inquiry
131(1)
New Developments and Perspectives (i.e., What Is Under Debate, Pending, and/or Unresolved in This Area?)
132(2)
Conclusion--Where Might Feminist Inquiry Go in the Next Decade?
134(1)
Discussion Questions
135(2)
Chapter 6 Critical Race Theory and the Postracial Imaginary
137(16)
Jamet K. Donnor
Gloria Ladson-Biltings
Introduction--Keeping It Real
137(1)
The Moral Clarion Call
138(3)
Race and the Work of Social Scientists
141(3)
The Promise and Potential of Critical Race Theory
144(2)
Challenges to Critical Race Theory
146(1)
Just what exactly is critical race theory?
146(2)
Critical race theory in education and the issue of rigor
148(1)
Conclusion--Race Still Matters
149(3)
Notes
152(1)
Chapter 7 Intersectionality Methodology: A Qualitative Research Imperative for Black Women's Lives
153(14)
Chayta Haynes
Saran Stewart
Lori D. Patton
Introduction
153(2)
Intersectionality Methodology: A Qualitative Research Imperative for Black Women's Lives
155(2)
Intersectionality: Black Feminism as Theory, Research, and Praxis
157(1)
Intersectionality Methodology
158(6)
IM Draws Upon Crenshaw's Intersectionality
158(1)
IM's Features Enable Sophisticated Intersectional Analyses
159(3)
IM Approach to Data Collection and Transformation
162(2)
Envisioning a Future for Intersectionality Methodology
164(1)
Discussion Questions
165(1)
Note
166(1)
Chapter 8 Queer/Quare Theory: Worldmaking and Methodologies (Revisited)
167(42)
Bryant Keith Alexander
Queering Queer Theory
171(9)
Queer Worldmaking (or Raising and Lowering of Flags)
175(5)
Unprecedented Times (or Queer Patriotism) (January 6, 2021)
180(2)
Queer of Color Critique/Analysis
182(4)
Tenets of Ferguson's Queer of Color Critique/Analysis
186(2)
Tenets of Johnson's Quare Studies
188(4)
Theorems of Disidentification
192(13)
Dear Jussie Smollet
199(6)
Discussion Questions
205(1)
Notes
206(3)
Chapter 9 Critical Disability Studies and Diverse Bodyminds in Qualitative Inquiry
209(14)
Emily A. Nusbaum
Jessica Nina Lester
Introduction and Aims
209(1)
Working at the Intersections: Disability and Critical Qualitative Research
210(2)
Disability Studies: An Overview
212(2)
Critical Disability Studies and the Key Conceptual Connections
214(3)
Underlying Assumptions of Crip Horizons
216(1)
Committing to and Doing the Work of Centering Disability
217(2)
Conclusions and Musings
219(2)
Notes
221(2)
Chapter 10 Critical Post-Intentional Phenomenological Inquiry (CRIT-PIP): Why It Matters and What It Can Do
223(18)
Mark D. Vagle
Keitha-Gail Martin-Kerr
Jana LoBelto Miller
Bisola Wald
Hazen Fairbanks
Introduction
223(1)
Historical Grounding of Phenomenology
223(4)
Phenomenological Philosophy-30K Feet
224(2)
Phenomenological Methodology--10K Feet
226(1)
Phenomenological Methods--"On the Ground"
226(1)
Post-Intentional Phenomenology [ PIP]: A Brief Overview of Key Principles
227(4)
Important Shifts in PIP Toward the Critical
229(2)
A Not-Tidy Conclusion: CRIT-PIP Directly Engaging the Social and Political
231(1)
From Hazen
231(1)
Land Acknowledgment
231(1)
Background on Indigenous Frameworks
231(1)
Native American Ten Commandments
232(7)
What Crit-PIP Must Do
233(1)
From Bisola
234(2)
From Keitha-Gail
236(1)
From Jana
237(2)
Discussion Questions
239(1)
Notes
239(2)
Chapter 11 Why We Do Indigenous Methodologies: Contemplations on Indigenous Protocol, Theory, and Method
241(18)
Sweeney Windchief
Timothy San Pedro
Margaret Kovach
Indigenous Dispossession and Resistance Arises Indigenous Methodologies
242(2)
The Axiological Imperative of Indigenous Theory and Methodologies
244(2)
A Letter From Sweeney
246(4)
Intentionality
246(1)
Some Important Questions
247(1)
TrianguLation
248(2)
Research Can Be Conscientized and Liberating
250(1)
A Letter from Timothy San Pedro
250(5)
Concluding Remarks
255(1)
Discussion Questions
256(1)
Notes
256(3)
Chapter 12 Postcolonial and Decolonized Knowing: Speaking "Nearby"--A Letter to Rekha
259(14)
Devika Chawla
Discussion Questions
271(2)
Chapter 13 Poststructural Engagements
273(20)
Aaron M. Kuntz
Introduction
273(1)
Organizational Structure
274(3)
Defining Poststructural/Theory
277(3)
Fascist Problems (and Answers)
280(2)
What Is "Post" Anyway?
282(1)
Becoming-with Poststructuralism
283(2)
Antimethod?
285(2)
Poststructural Inquiry
287(1)
What Is to Be Done? (and Something Must Be Done)
287(2)
Conclusion: Enacting Poststructural Inquiry as Antimethod
289(1)
Discussion Questions
290(1)
Notes
290(3)
Chapter 14 Agential Realism, Intra-Action, and Diffractive Methodology
293(14)
Serge F. Hein
Key Concepts in Barad's Theory
294(3)
Agential Realism, Intra-Action, Entanglement, and Agential Cut
294(2)
Diffraction and Diffractive Methodology
296(1)
Criticisms of Barad's Theory
297(3)
A Research Example
300(1)
Methodological Issues Associated with the Use of Barad's Theory
301(2)
Future Directions for the Use of Barad's Theory
303(1)
Discussion Questions
304(1)
Notes
304(3)
PART III PRACTICES OF INQUIRY
307(190)
Chapter 15 Examining the "Inside Lives" of Research Interviews
317(16)
Kathryn Roulston
Introduction
317(1)
A Short History of Interviewing
317(2)
Challenges of the Interview Method
319(2)
Examining the Seen-but-Unnoticed Features of Research Interviews
321(1)
Examining Features of Interview Interaction
322(4)
What Topics Have Researchers Studied?
326(1)
New Developments
327(3)
Conclusion
330(1)
Discussion Questions
330(1)
Acknowledgments
331(1)
Note
331(1)
Appendix: Transcription Conventions
331(2)
Chapter 16 Observation in a Surveilled World
333(18)
Jack Bratich
Epistemology and Proximity
333(2)
Current Context
335(2)
History
337(1)
Modern Observation as Academic Practice
337(1)
Mediation and Method
338(3)
Ethics of Proximity
341(2)
Observing Observation, Differently
343(1)
Practical Issues of Implementation
344(2)
Developments in Observation and Surveillance
346(1)
Emergent Issues, Tendencies, and Speculations About the Future
347(2)
Discussion Questions
349(1)
Notes
350(1)
Chapter 17 Ethnographic Futures: Embodied, Diffractive, and Decolonizing Approaches
351(18)
Michael D. Giardina
Michele K. Donnelly
Proem
351(5)
A Turn Toward the Body
356(2)
A Turn Toward New Materialism and Diffraction
358(4)
A Turn Toward Decolonization
362(2)
Conclusion
364(1)
Discussion Questions
365(1)
Acknowledgments
365(1)
Notes
365(4)
Chapter 18 Critical Situational Analysis After the Interpretive Turn
369(16)
Adele E. Clarke
Carrie Friese
Rachel Washburn
Introduction
369(1)
Why "the Situation" and Not Just "Context"?
369(1)
Theoretical Foundations
370(1)
Methodological Approaches
371(7)
Situational Maps
372(1)
Mapping Relationality
373(1)
Social Worlds/Arenas Maps
374(3)
Positional Maps
377(1)
Critical Affordances of SA Research
378(3)
Recent Developments and Debates Regarding SA
381(2)
New Directions in SA Research
383(1)
Discussion Questions
384(1)
Notes
384(1)
Chapter 19 Thematic Analysis
385(18)
Virginia Braun
Victoria Clarke
Introduction and Aims
385(1)
Introducing Thematic Analysis: A Brief History
385(2)
Three Key Debates Around Thematic Analysis
387(2)
Epistemology and Ontology in (Reflexive) Thematic Analysis
389(1)
Doing Reflexive Thematic Analysis: Theoretical and Methodological Guidance
390(1)
Data Familiarization
391(2)
Coding
393(2)
Generating Initial Themes
395(1)
Developing Themes: Reviewing, Refining, Defining, and Naming Themes
396(1)
Writing the Report
397(1)
New Developments and Applications
398(2)
Concluding Thoughts
400(1)
Discussion Questions
401(1)
Notes
401(2)
Chapter 20 Qualitative Social Media Methods: Netnography in the Age of Technocultures
403(18)
Robert V. Kozinets
Ulrike Gretzel
Introduction
403(1)
Ethnographic Research on Social Media: Challenges and Opportunities
404(3)
How Social Media and Netnography Coevolved
407(1)
Methodology: Ontology, Epistemology, and Axiology
408(2)
Virtual Ethnography, Digital Ethnography, and Other Approaches
410(2)
Five Advantageous Differences of Netnography
412(1)
Steps and Priorities of Netnography
413(3)
Conducting Ethical Research
416(1)
Evolving Netnography
417(2)
Discussion Questions
419(1)
Notes
419(2)
Chapter 21 Autoethnography as Becoming-with
421(16)
Stacy Holman Jones
Tony E. Adams
Introduction: Autoethnography as Making Kin
421(1)
Background and History: Autoethnography Then and Now
421(2)
Core Assumptions: Autoethnography Is Onto-epistemological
423(1)
Paying Attention to the Traces and Residue of the Personal
423(1)
Being Curious About the Ineffable and the Tacit
424(1)
Showing the Inseparability of Thought and Action
424(1)
The Work of Autoethnography
424(3)
Foregrounding Personal Experience in/as Research
425(1)
Gaining Insight Into the Emotional, Embodied, and Relational
425(1)
Grappling With the Subjective, Everyday, and Emergent
426(1)
Composing a Common Liveable World
426(1)
The Hows and the Whys of Autoethnography: Theoretical and Methodological Approaches
427(2)
Missing Each Other
427(1)
Monument to Rehearsal
428(1)
Developments and Debates
429(1)
Evaluating Autoethnography
430(1)
Autoethnographic Ethics
431(1)
Conclusion
432(1)
Discussion Questions
432(1)
Notes
433(4)
Chapter 22 Performance Shapes for Qualitative Inquiry
437(16)
Johnny Saldana
Introduction: Purpose, Terminology, and Goals
437(1)
Brief Historic Background
437(1)
Epistemological Assumptions of Performance
438(1)
Performance Shapes for Qualitative Inquiry
438(12)
The Research Studio
439(1)
Improvisational Inquiry
439(3)
Theatre of the Oppressed
442(1)
Ethnodrama and Ethnotheatre
443(2)
Transformation
445(3)
Autoethnographic Performance
448(1)
See Johnny Remember
449(1)
New Developments and Perspectives
450(1)
Conclusion
451(1)
Discussion Questions
452(1)
Chapter 23 The Arts as Research: Nomadic Materiality and Possible Futures
453(14)
Richard Siegesmund
Overview
454(3)
The Arts as Inquiry Into Social Justice
454(1)
The Arts as Inquiry Into Materiality
455(1)
The Arts as Personal Becoming
456(1)
Conceptual Approaches to the Arts as Research
457(1)
The Arts as Embodied Practice
457(1)
Sullivan's Artistic Domains
457(1)
Guiding Questions for Embodied Practice
458(1)
Aesthetic Approaches to Research
458(5)
Visuality
458(2)
Design as Social Intervention
460(1)
Resistance to the Arts as Research
460(1)
Narrative and Poetic Analysis
461(1)
Performance
461(2)
Ethical Questions Surrounding the Arts as Research
463(1)
Conclusion
464(1)
Discussion Questions
465(2)
Chapter 24 Communicative Methodology: Working Together With the Roma Community for Improving Their Lives
467(14)
Aitor Gomez Gonzalez
The Main Pillars of the Communicative Methodology
467(6)
Dialogic Orientation
467(1)
The Seven Postulates of the Communicative Methodology
468(1)
The Universality of Language and Action
468(1)
Individuals as Transformative Social Agents
469(1)
Communicative Rationality
469(1)
Common Sense
469(1)
No Interpretative Hierarchy
469(1)
Same Epistemological Level
470(1)
Dialogic Knowledge
470(1)
The Importance of the Interactions
470(1)
Egalitarian Dialogue
470(1)
Cultural Intelligence
471(1)
Transformation
471(1)
Instrumental Dimension
471(1)
Creation of Meaning
471(1)
Solidarity
472(1)
Equality of Differences
472(1)
Twenty-Five Years Working With and for the Roma Community
473(3)
Communicative Organization
474(1)
Communicative Data Collection Techniques
475(1)
Communicative Data Analysis
476(1)
Communicative Methodology and Social Impact Within the Roma Community
476(3)
How the Social Impact Within the Roma Community Has Been Reached Using the Communicative Methodology
477(1)
The Influence of the Communicative Methodology Applied in Workalo and the Integrated Plan of the Roma Community in Catalonia
478(1)
Discussion Questions
479(2)
Chapter 25 Betweener Autoethnographies: Collaborative Inquiry from the Borderlands
481(16)
Claudio Moreira
Marcelo Diversi
Prologue
481(1)
Introduction
481(1)
Expanding the Circle of Us
482(3)
Locating Betweener Autoethnographies in Qualitative Inquiry
485(2)
Performance Turn
487(1)
Critical Pedagogy
488(1)
Third World Feminism
489(1)
Central Metaphor: Betweener Autoethnographies
490(1)
Activism Through Decolonizing Inquiry
491(4)
Words to End With: Into the Future
495(1)
Discussion Questions
496(1)
PART IV EVIDENCE, POLITICS, AND KNOWLEDGE PRODUCTION
497(98)
Chapter 26 Qualitative Inquiry and Public Health Science: Case Studies From the COVID-19 Pandemic
501(18)
Trisha Greenhalgh
Ama de-Graft Aikins
Introduction and Aims
501(1)
The COVID-19 Pandemic in (and as) Context
501(3)
Studying the Pandemic Empirically--The Case Study Method
504(2)
Case Study 1 The "African COVID-19 Paradox"--Interrogating Global Health Blind Spots
506(5)
Case Study 2 Power and Pragmatism in the Science of SARS-CoV-2 Transmission
511(5)
Conclusion and Epilogue
516(1)
Discussion Questions
517(1)
Acknowledgments
518(1)
Notes
518(1)
Chapter 27 Science, Evidence, and the Development of Policy and Practice: Can Qualitative Research Make a Different Contribution?
519(16)
Harry Torrance
Introduction
519(1)
Qualitative Inquiry and Scientific Research
519(2)
The Logic of Experimental Design
521(1)
Evidence-Based Medicine
522(1)
Renewed Disillusionment With RCTs in Educational Research
523(1)
Beyond Individual RCTs: What of the General Evidence Base?
524(3)
Science, Evidence, and Policy
527(1)
Can Qualitative Research Make a Different Contribution?
528(3)
Experimenting With Qualitative Research
531(1)
Conclusion
532(1)
Discussion Questions
533(2)
Chapter 28 Co-production and Impact: Challenges and Opportunities
535(14)
Brett Smith
Kerry R. McGannon
Co-Production: Toward Plurality of Meanings
535(1)
Co-Producing Research: Two Types
536(3)
Co-Production: The Role of Qualitative Researchers and Research
539(2)
Why Co-Produce Research?
541(1)
Impact: Definitions and Challenges
542(3)
Impact: Opportunities and Ways Forward
545(2)
Conclusions
547(1)
Discussion Questions
548(1)
Acknowledgements
548(1)
Chapter 29 The Elephant in the Living Room, or Extending the Conversation About the Politics of Evidence, Part 2
549(18)
Norman K. Denzin
Prologue
549(1)
Dramatic Personae
549(1)
Act One: Scene One: Dead Elephant (to be read by the antidata chorus)
549(1)
Act One: Scene Two: Elephants in Living Rooms
550(2)
Act One: Scene Three: Myths, Standards, and Criteria
552(2)
Act One: Scene Four: The Politics of Evidence
554(1)
Act Two: Scene One: The Parable of the Elephant
555(1)
Act Two: Scene Two: Two Other Versions of the Elephant
556(1)
Act Three: Scene One: Data All Over Again
557(1)
Act Three: Scene Two: A Rupture
558(1)
Act Three: Scene Three: The Politics of Evidence Again
559(1)
Act Three: Scene Three: Data Will Not Die
560(1)
Act Three: Scene Four: A World Without Data, a World Without Evidence
561(1)
The Performance Turn
562(1)
We Need a New Word
562(1)
An Aside on the Method of Instances
562(1)
Toward A Performative Cultural Politics
563(1)
Performance as Intervention
563(1)
Guiding Principles for a New Fable
564(1)
In Conclusion
565(1)
Discussion Questions
565(1)
Notes
565(2)
Chapter 30 Backsliding Toward Illiberal Democracy and Authoritarianism: Qualitative Inquiry, Academic Freedom, and Technologies of Governance
567(28)
Marc Spooner
From Coups to Backsliding
569(1)
What Kind of Democracy?
570(1)
Academic Freedom and Democracy
571(3)
On Academic Freedom
574(3)
Academic Freedom and Global Health
577(1)
Scholars at Risk?
578(1)
Academic Freedom and Liberal Democratic Drift
579(1)
The Red Scare
579(1)
McCarthy and the Cold War
579(1)
9/11 and Beyond
580(5)
Diversity Tests
585(2)
Audit Culture
587(2)
A Call to Action
589(3)
Discussion Questions
592(1)
Acknowledgments
592(1)
Notes
592(3)
PART V INTO THE FUTURE
595
Chapter 31 Academic Survival: Qualitative Researchers in the Neoliberal Academy
599(18)
Julianne Cheek
Introduction and Aims
599(2)
The Importance of Knowing What Counts, Why, and How in a Neoliberal Academy
601(2)
Challenging Survivals: Neoliberal-Derived Versions of the Academic Supplicant and the Supplicant University
603(1)
The Nonprecariat's Role
604(1)
Survival: A Double-Edged Sword in the Neoliberal Academy?
605(2)
Surviving by Getting to Know Our Data Doubles and Mini-Me's and What They Do
607(2)
Surviving by Letting Others Shine: Teaching, Mentoring, and Sponsoring Others
609(1)
Teaching
609(1)
Sponsoring, Not Just Mentoring, Younger/Less Experienced Academics
610(1)
Taking Action: Have We Been Asleep at the Wheel?
610(2)
Rounding Off: Where to Now With No Easy End in Sight?
612(2)
Discussion Questions
614(1)
Notes
615(2)
Chapter 32 Publishing and Reviewing Qualitative Research
617(16)
Mitchell Allen
How to Publish Qualitative Research
618(2)
A Brief History
620(2)
The Scholarly Publishing Ecosystem
622(4)
Reviewing Qualitative Research
626(2)
The Future of Publishing Qualitative Research
628(2)
Discussion Questions
630(1)
Acknowledgments
630(1)
Notes
630(3)
Chapter 33 Qualitative Inquiry and Posthuman Futures: Justice and Challenging the Human/Nonhuman Life Dichotomy
633(14)
Mirka Koro
Gaile S. Cannella
(Irreconcilable] Explanations and Avoiding Definitions
634(1)
Historical Groundings and Emergent Relations
635(4)
Language, Western Privilege, and Researcher Concerns
635(1)
Background History
636(2)
Critiques, Cautions, and Possibilities
638(1)
Considering Conceptual Posthumanist Relations
639(3)
Ethics and an Ontological Turn Toward Assemblages, Networks, and Systems
639(1)
Entanglements and Oddkin Relations
640(1)
Multiplicity
641(1)
Relational Qualitative Research: Becomingswith Posthumanist Orientations
642(2)
Posthuman Qualitative Research Futurings
644(2)
Discussion Questions
646(1)
Chapter 34 The Future of Qualitative Research
647
Norman K. Denzin
Yvonna S. Lincoln
Michael D. Giardina
Gaile S. Cannella
Charting the Future
649(1)
Coming Together
650(2)
Final Thoughts
652(1)
Note
653
Norman K. Denzin was Distinguished Emeritus Professor of Communications, College of Communications Scholar, and Research Professor of Communications, Sociology, and Humanities at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA. One of the worlds foremost authorities on qualitative research and cultural criticism, he was the author or editor of more than 30 books, including The Qualitative Manifesto; Qualitative Inquiry Under Fire; Reading Race; Interpretive Ethnography; The Cinematic Society; The Alcoholic Self; and a trilogy on the American West. He was past editor of The Sociological Quarterly, co-editor of six editions of the landmark SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research, co-editor (with Michael D. Giardina) of 18 books on qualitative inquiry, co-editor (with Yvonna S. Lincoln and Michael D. Giardina) of the methods journal Qualitative Inquiry, founding editor of Cultural Studies-Critical Methodologies and International Review of Qualitative Research, editor of four book series, and founding director of the International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry. 





Yvonna S. Lincoln is Professor Emerita at Texas A&M University, where she held the Ruth Harrington Chair of Educational Leadership and was Distinguished Professor of Higher Education. She is the coeditor of the journal Qualitative Inquiry, coeditor of the first through six editions of The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research, and coeditor of The SAGE Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies. As well, she is the coauthor, editor, or coeditor of more than a half dozen other books and volumes. She has served as the President of the Association for the Study of Higher Education and the American Evaluation Research Association, and as the Vice President for Division J (Postsecondary Education) for the American Educational Research Association. She is the author of coauthor of more than 100 chapters and journal articles on aspects of higher education or qualitative research methods and methodologies.  Michael D. Giardina is Professor of Physical Culture and Qualitative Inquiry in the Department of Sport Management at Florida State University, USA. He is the author or editor of more than 20 books, including the award-winning Sport, Spectacle, and NASCAR Nation: Consumption and the Cultural Politics of Neoliberalism (with Joshua Newman; Palgrave Macmillan, 2011) and Collaborative Futures in Qualitative Inquiry: Research in a Pandemic (with Norman K. Denzin; Routledge, 2021). He is a two-time recipient of the NASSS Outstanding Book Award (2006, 2012). He is the coeditor of Qualitative Inquiry, coeditor of Cultural Studies?Critical Methodologies, coeditor of International Review of Qualitative Research, coeditor of three book series on qualitative inquiry for Routledge, and Director of the International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry (ICQI). He can be followed on Twitter @mdgiardinaFSU.

Gaile S. Cannella is an independent scholar who for many years served as a tenured Full Professor at Texas A&M University College Station and at Arizona State University Tempe, as well as the Velma Schmidt Endowed Chair of Education at the University of North Texas.  Her scholarship focuses on diverse constructions of critical qualitative inquiry, reconceptualist and critical childhood studies, and justice broadly related to childhood, support for diversity, environmental studies and human/nonhuman conceptualizations and power orientations.  Dr. Cannellas work has appeared in more than 100 chapters and journal articles; she has authored or edited 11 books that include Childhood in More Just Worlds: An International Handbook; the Critical Qualitative Research Reader; Reconceptualizing Early Childhood Care and Education; Critical Qualitative Inquiry Foundations and Futures; and Childhood and Postcolonialism. She focuses on facilitating the work of critical scholars through both edited volumes and special journal issues and has initiated research projects that explore topics like racism in qualitative research, liminalities and hybrid lives, and justice matters(ings). Her doctoral students have received a range of national and international dissertation awards. Dr. Cannella also received the 2017 Reconceptualizing Early Childhood Education and Care Bloch Career Award.