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All Outputs (73)

Messodology in the margins: Researchers’ own constructions in/as data
Presentation / Conference Contribution
Stanley, P. (2019, February). Messodology in the margins: Researchers’ own constructions in/as data. Paper presented at 3rd European Congress of Qualitative Inquiry, Edinburgh, UK

Here’s something that’s been discredited, but let’s take it one step further. In qualitative research, we know it’s hokum that an all-knowing researcher “collects” data —springing already formed— from participants. Data “collection”, we know, is all... Read More about Messodology in the margins: Researchers’ own constructions in/as data.

Autoethnography, assemblage, and the lived/researched subjectivity of hiking "alone"
Presentation / Conference Contribution
Stanley, P. (2023, January). Autoethnography, assemblage, and the lived/researched subjectivity of hiking "alone". Paper presented at European Congress of Qualitative Inquiry, Portsmouth, UK

This paper examines the complex production of “aloneness” as subjectivity, considering lived experience, multimedia Instagram/Facebook texts, and academic writing. The context is hiking and camping/bothying “alone” and, in particular, hiking alone as... Read More about Autoethnography, assemblage, and the lived/researched subjectivity of hiking "alone".

A bubble of one: Reflections on witches and spinsterhood in pandemic times
Presentation / Conference Contribution
Stanley, P. (2021, September). A bubble of one: Reflections on witches and spinsterhood in pandemic times. Paper presented at 6th Critical Autoethnography Conference, Melbourne, Australia and online

In these pandemic times there are couple-bubbles and household bubbles and social bubbles. And then there is me, uncoupled, unchilded, in a bubble of one. (Four if you count the cats.)

In early modern Scotland, the Witchcraft Act (1563) held my t... Read More about A bubble of one: Reflections on witches and spinsterhood in pandemic times.

“Researching” real-life gendered normativities and performances of expertise: Natural ethnography, friendship as method, and a campervan conversion project
Presentation / Conference Contribution
Stanley, P. (2018, November). “Researching” real-life gendered normativities and performances of expertise: Natural ethnography, friendship as method, and a campervan conversion project. Paper presented at Contemporary Ethnography Across the Disciplines, Chile

Last year, I bought a former plumber’s van and built myself a campervan. Then I reflected on the experience —including writing about it in scholarly spaces— as a learning ‘journey’ and as a series of identity negotiations. There was the everyday sexi... Read More about “Researching” real-life gendered normativities and performances of expertise: Natural ethnography, friendship as method, and a campervan conversion project.

Volunteer tourism in Latin America: Activism, epistemic violence, and/or cultural relativism?
Presentation / Conference Contribution
Stanley, P. (2019, February). Volunteer tourism in Latin America: Activism, epistemic violence, and/or cultural relativism?. Paper presented at 3rd European Congress of Qualitative Inquiry, Edinburgh

Latin America has a history of “internacionalistas”: outsiders travelling to help resistance efforts against murderous right-wing regimes. In the 1950s and 1960s, Che Guevara volunteered as a medic in Guatemala, Cuba, and Bolivia, and in the 1980s, i... Read More about Volunteer tourism in Latin America: Activism, epistemic violence, and/or cultural relativism?.

Homecoming: Walking methodologies as ontology and epistemology
Presentation / Conference Contribution
Stanley, P. (2019, July). Homecoming: Walking methodologies as ontology and epistemology. Paper presented at Activism, Social Justice & Collaboration: The Sixth British Conference of Autoethnography, Bristol

(Not) costing the earth? Theorizing flight shame, train bragging, and campervan travel
Presentation / Conference Contribution
Stanley, P. (2020, February). (Not) costing the earth? Theorizing flight shame, train bragging, and campervan travel. Paper presented at European Congress of Qualitative Inquiry, Malta

Flygskam (flight-shame), a Swedish neologism, hints at an emerging climate-smart tourist movement: closer-to-home, flight-free travel1. But going overland is more expensive and time consuming than flying, as capitalism does not price in environmental... Read More about (Not) costing the earth? Theorizing flight shame, train bragging, and campervan travel.

Assemblages and/as the production of subjectivities: Fat girl, hiking
Presentation / Conference Contribution
Stanley, P. (2022, January). Assemblages and/as the production of subjectivities: Fat girl, hiking. Paper presented at 2022 International Symposium on Autoethnography and Narrative (ISAN), Florida/Online

About fatness, hiking, and assemblages, and about how things come together in unlikely ways to produce subjectivities.