Autoethnography
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FIFTEENTH Congress of Qualitative Inquiry University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign www.icqi.org In Memoriam: Terry Denny June 6, 1930-November 1, 2018 2 General information Contents Welcome from the Director 4 Autoethnography: Poetic Mobilities V 10 General Information 11 Institute of Qualitative Inquiry Collaborating Sites 12 2019 Congress Award Winners 15 Sixteenth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry 24 Thursday Workshops 26 Keynote Addresses 28 Overview 30 Wednesday 46 Thursday 58 Friday 74 Saturday 156 Arts-Based Research 222 Autoethnography 242 Psychology 268 Coalition For Critical Qualitative Inquiry (CCQI) 274 Digital Tools 290 Indigenous Inquiries Circle Pre-Conference Day 292 Emerging Issues in Qualitative Health Research 300 Social Work Day 306 Un Día en Español y Portugués (ADISP) 316 Forum of Critical Chinese Qualitative Research 328 Index 332 Subject Index 368 General information 3 Welcome from the Director We shall not cease from exploration/ And the end of all our exploring/ Will be to arrive where we started/ And know the place for the first time (T. S. Elliot, No 4 of Four Quartets, 1942). 1. Elder Joseph Naytowhow & Jamie Singson (Director of the Illini Union), Welcome from Indig- enous Inquiries Circle. May we begin with a moment of silence. We wish to acknowledge the land upon which we gather today. These lands were the traditional territory of a number of First Nations bands prior to European contact. The Miami, the Potawatomi, the Peoria and the Kickapoo were some of the last bands to be forcibly removed. These lands carry the memories and stories of resistance of these people, including their struggles for survival and identity in the face of overwhelming colonizing power. 2. The University of Illinois, the College of Media, the International Center for Qualitative Inquiry, the Institute of Communications Research and the Department of Media and Cinema Studies welcome you to the Fifteenth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry. There are over 1600 pre- sentations involving 2150 people this year, including 300 panels in the general Congress. The theme of the 2019 Congress is Qualitative Inquiry and the Politics of Resistance. The 2019 Congress is committed to a politics of active and passive resistance, to non-violence, to bearing wit- ness to injustice, refusing to be silenced, refusing to accept assaults on critical, interpretive inquiry, refusing to abandon the goal of social justice for all. It is committed to confronting structures of repression which keep people in marginalized states by repressing critical consciousness. The truth cannot be repressed. Justice will prevail. We call for a politics of hope, acts of activism, discourses of resistance which imagine the impossible. We are global citizens trapped in a world we did not create, nor want any part of. Our public insti- tutions are under assault. Academics and pacifists critical of the public order are branded as traitors. The 2019 Congress offers scholars the opportunity to foreground, interrogate, imagine and engage new ways of a politics of resistance and critical qualitative inquiry in these troubling times. Sessions will take up such topics as: research as resistance, redefinitions of the public university, neoliberal accountability metrics, attacks on freedom of speech, threats to shared governance, the politics of advocacy, value-free inquiry, partisanship, the politics of evidence, public policy discourse, Indigenous research ethics, decolonizing inquiry. Scholars come to the Congress to resist, to celebrate community, to experiment with traditional and new methodologies, with new technologies of representation. Together we seek to develop guidelines and exemplars concerning advocacy, inquiry and social justice concerns. We share a commitment to change the world, to engage in ethical work that makes a positive difference. As critical scholars, our task is to bring the past and the future into the present, allowing us to engage realistic utopian pedago- gies of hope. Scholars from around the world have accepted the challenge to gather together in common purpose to collectively imagine creative and critical responses to a global community in crisis. The Fifteenth International Congress offers us an opportunity to experiment, take risks, explore new presentational forms, share experiences, problems and hopes concerning the conduct of critical qualitative inquiry in this time of global uncertainty. Yours sincerely, Norman K. Denzin Congress Director 4 General information Conference Welcome Thursday, 5:30–7:00pm, Illini Union, Illini Room A & B 1) Norman K. Denzin, Congress Director’s welcoming remarks 2) Elder Joseph Naytowhow, Welcome from Indigenous Inquiries Circle 3) Keynote addresses Elizabeth St.Pierre, University of Georgia Post Qualitative Inquiry, the Refusal of Method, and the Risk of the New Aitor Gomez, Universitat Rovira i Virgili Science With and For Society Through Qualitative Inquiry 4) Opening Midwest BBQ, Alice Campbell Alumni Center: 7–9pm. Other Congress Activities Thursday May 17 All day: Social Work Day 8:45am-5:15pm: Union South Lounge: Combined Poster Sessions 3:30-5:00: Illini Room C: Congress Reception: Collaborating Sites Network Friday May 18 11:45-12:45: Illini Room B: Award Ceremony 5:30-6:30: Illini Room B: Plenary Performance: Reconceptualizing the Archetypal Journey Karen Wallace, Kathryn Ricketts, Joseph Naytowhow, Patrick Lewis Saturday May 19 1:00-2:10: CSN Advisory Committee Business Meeting, Noyes 163 7:00pm-9:00pm: COOKOUT Old-fashioned Midwest Cookout, 7–9pm, Alice Campbell Alumni Center. General information 5 Publisher’s Exhibit Pine Lounge Wednesday 12:00-5:00 Thursday 9:00-5:00 Friday: 9:00-5:00 Saturday: 9:00-12:00 Poster Sessions Union South Lounge Thursday 8:45-5:15 Collaborating Sites Network Reception Illini Room C Thursday 3:30-5:00 Book Signing Pine Lounge Thursday 4:00-5:00 Award Ceremony Illini B Friday 11:45-12:45 Plenary Performance Illini B Friday 5:30-6:30 6 General information CONGRESS ORGANIZERS The Fifteenth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry is organized by the College of Media, Institute of Communications Research, Department of Media and Cinema Studies, The Interdisciplinary Program in Cultural Studies and Interpretive Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in conjunction with the International Center for Qualitative Inquiry. CONGRESS PROGRAM This Congress program was compiled by the Congress organizing committee. The pro- gram was printed by Martin One Source. LOCAL PROGRAM SPONSORS American Indian Studies Program/Native American House * Anthropology * Center for Advanced Study * Center for Global Studies * Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies * International Center for Qualitative Inquiry * College of Media * European Union Center * Gender & Women’s Studies Program * Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities * Institute of Communications Research * Kinesiology and Community Health * Sociology * The Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory * Women and Gen- der in Global Perspectives Program OUTSIDE CONGRESS SPONSORS Carl Couch Center for Social and Internet Research (CCCSIR) * Center for Educational Research and Evaluation Service (CERES) and Liverpool John Moores University * Uni- versity of Greenwich and Discourse, Power, Resistance (DPR) Series * Emerald Group Publishing Limited * Guilford Press * International Association of Educators * Interna- tional Journal of Progressive Education * International Social Work Research Interest Group * Kansas State University * Education and Social Research Institute (ESRI), Man- chester Metropolitan University * MAXQDA/VERBI * QSR International * QUERI * Research Talk, Inc * Routledge * Sage Publications * Turkish Journal of Educational Policy Analysis and Strategic Research * University of Georgia * Writing Across Borders- Durham University CONGRESS ORGANIZATION Congress Director Norman K. Denzin Institute of Communications Research, Department of Media and Cinema Studies Associate Director James Salvo, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Assistant Directors Durell Callier, Michael Giardina, Aitor Gómez González On-Site Congress Coordinator Koeli Goel Congress Embassador-At-Large Mitch Allen, Scholarly Roadside Service Advisory Board University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign William E. Berry, Clifford Christians, Katherine Ryan External Advisory Board Mitch Allen, Scholarly Roadside Service Bryant Keith Alexander, California State University General information 7 Gaile Cannella, Independent Scholar Carolyn Ellis and Arthur Bochner, University of South Florida Svend Brinkmann, University of Aarhus Julianne Cheek, Østfold University College, Halden, Norway Aitor Gómez, Universitat Rovira i Virgili Serge Hein, Virginia Tech Sharlene Hess-Biber, Boston College Patti Lather, Ohio State University Yvonna S. Lincoln, Texas A& M University Janice Morse, University of Utah Elizabeth Adams St.Pierre, University of Georgia Ian Stronach, Liverpool John Moores University Harry Torrance and Maggie Maclure, Manchester Metropolitan University Rainer Winter and Elisabeth Niederer, Klagenfurt University, Austria Uwe Flick, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin Jonathan Wyatt, University of Edinburgh SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS ORGANIZERS: ADISP: Alejandro Noboa. Luis Felipe González-Gutiérrez. Aitor Gómez González, Pamela Zapata Sepúlveda, Magdalena Suárez ADIT: Mustafa Yunus Eryman Arts-Based Research: Nancy Gerber, Richard Siegesmund Autoethnography: Stacy Holman-Jones Coalition