Just Research in Contentious Times: Widening the Methodological Imagination available in Paperback
Just Research in Contentious Times: Widening the Methodological Imagination
- ISBN-10:
- 0807758736
- ISBN-13:
- 9780807758731
- Pub. Date:
- 11/17/2017
- Publisher:
- Teachers College Press
- ISBN-10:
- 0807758736
- ISBN-13:
- 9780807758731
- Pub. Date:
- 11/17/2017
- Publisher:
- Teachers College Press
Just Research in Contentious Times: Widening the Methodological Imagination
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Overview
Book Features:
- Reviews the theoretical and historical foundations of critical participatory research.
- Addresses why, how, with whom, and for whom research is designed.
- Offers case studies of critical PAR projects with youth of color, Muslim American youth, indigenous and refugee activists, and LGBTQ youth of color.
- Integrates critical race, feminist, postcolonial, and queer studies.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780807758731 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Teachers College Press |
Publication date: | 11/17/2017 |
Edition description: | New Edition |
Pages: | 160 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 8.80(h) x 0.40(d) |
About the Author
Table of Contents
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xv
1 Loss and Desire: Bearing Witness in White, Working-Class, Suburban New Jersey 1
Family His/Her-stories 2
Tracing the Biography of Our Research Questions 5
Commitments of Critical Research 6
Circling Back 9
2 Exiles Within: Wild Tongues and Critical Bifocals at the Radical Margins 11
Critical Bifocality: Situating Lives in Historical and Structural Analysis 12
Exiled from School: Re-Framing Dropouts 14
Exiled from Home: When Muslim American Youth Learned They Didn't "Belong" 19
Critical Bifocality as Theory-Method 25
3 Civics Lessons: The Color and Class of Educational Betrayal and Desire with April Burns María Elena Torre Yasser A. Payne 29
Learning from Those Who Endure: The Dynamics of the Focus Groups 32
Cumulative Inequity: Schooling Toward Alienation 32
Hearing Problems: A Violation of Procedural Justice 43
College Going, Perhaps 44
Civics Lessons 45
4 "Wicked Problems," "Flying Monkeys," and Prec(ar)ious Lives: A Matter of Time? Andrew Cory Greene Sonia Sanchez 49
Curating Testimony 50
The Cumulative Weight of Growing Up in Precarity 64
Building Schools for Racial, Educational, and Labor Justice 67
5 Just Methods: Historic and Contemporary Laboratories of Democratic Knowledge Production 71
Historic Veins of Participatory Research 72
The Public Science Project 77
Echoes of Brown: Documenting the Unfulfilled Promise of Educational Integration 82
Do You Believe in Geneva? Critical Participatory Action Research with the Global Rights Campaign 88
Critical Participatory Action Research: Kneading, Translating, and Braiding Across and Within Borderlands 94
6 "Speaking Words of Wisdom": Metabolizing Oppression into Intersectional Activism, Radical Wit, and Care Work with Maria Elena Torre, David Frost Allison Cabana 97
Coloniality of Being 98
Queer Youth Under Siege: What's Your Issue? 99
The Obligations of Critical Community Inquiry 109
"Willful Subjects" 111
Conclusion: Critical Participatory Action Research and Democracies: Lighting the Slow Fuse of the Research Imagination 113
To Whom Are We Accountable? Public Science and Neoliberal Blues 114
Participatory Inquiry: Building Fragile Communities of Critical Knowledge and Action 116
"Public" at a Crossroads: Breaking Silences, Revealing Resistance, and Provoking Possibilities 121
References 124
Index 135
About the Author 144
What People are Saying About This
"It is nearly impossible to capture the stunning effect of Just Research in Contentious Times. In showing how critical PAR works, the chapters create a gut punch for research and its impact on participants and on the researchers themselves. It reveals that we are all guilty and also all vulnerable."—Yvonna Lincoln, Texas A&M University
“Just Research in Contentious Times is beyond inspiring. The powerfully illuminating stories of suppressed progressive collective inquiry and radical theorizing revealed so imaginatively in this volume is vital for engaging youth and dispossessed communities in critical research methods for democratic movement building. This book is teeming with heartfelt practical examples of what knowledge production for human freedom and justice requires of us.”—Joyce E. King, Benjamin E. Mays Endowed Chair for Urban Teaching, Learning and Leadership, Georgia State University
“Michelle Fine’s research captures both the results of structural violence as well as the miraculous forms of resistance undergirding the precarious daily life of society’s most vulnerable citizens. Applying innovative methodologies, Dr. Fine synthesizes quantitative and qualitative data to privilege a ground-up rather than top-down analysis. This book offers the reader insight on how to capture a dynamic, balanced, and realistic portrait of people who face impossible odds.”—William E. Cross, professor emeritus, Graduate Center, CUNY
“This lucid, bold, and thoughtful book reconceptualizes what universities, education, and research can be. It is a record, too, of a staggering amount of difficult, often painful work. This—the sensitive, dogged, creative, and hopeful practices of collaboration, contest, and negotiation documented here—is what research as social justice looks like.”—Corinne Squire, co-director, Centre for Narrative Research, University of East London, UK
“In regards to methodology and epistemology, this is such a rich book. It can be read as a manifesto for a radical transformation of public education; as critical sociology of law from below; as a plea for a counter-hegemonic conception of human rights—the right to education in particular; as an experiment on critical participatory action research; as an exemplar of what I call the epistemologies of the south; and also as a brilliant and engaging intellectual autobiography.” —Boaventura de Sousa Santos, University of Coimbra and University of Wisconsin-Madison, author of The Epistemologies of the South: Justice against Epistemicide
"Fine exposes the veins, hopes, promises, and obstacles confronting scholars who dream of a racial democracy that is not yet here. For this we are in her debt."—Norman K. Denzin, University of Illinois
“Michelle Fine's book is a provocative, scholarly, personal, and inspiring invitation to critical participatory research for justice. The examples of work with various marginalized communities, to gather evidence, challenge structural violence, and open up possibilities toward liberation, are perfect antidotes to dispassionate research that often bolster the status quo. Indeed, the entire book is a gripping, powerful, reflexive counter-story about research for justice and transformation—exactly what is needed in these contentious times.”—Christopher C. Sonn, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia
"Fine’s writing is narrational, witty, charming, intellectually robust, and always deeply reflexive. A must-read that highlights the role of methodological creativity and pluralism in opening up vistas of imagined futures that are more just and egalitarian, and that are constantly unfolding. A quintessential, Fine piece of scholarship!"—Garth Stevens, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa