Reflexive Research and the (Re)Turn to the Baroque

Or, how I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the University

Author:
Reflexive research and the (re)turn to the baroque. (Or, How I learned to stop worrying and love the university) seeks an answer to the question posed by Gilles Deleuze, ‘Why do we desire what oppresses us?"
The book presents a narrative conceived within a baroque framework which attempts, with a proper sense of irony, to reveal the truth about the academy, and the way in which, as institution, it constructs our desires. The book also sets out a methodology for exploring questions related to identity and discourses and discusses how a sense of baroque, characterised as belonging to the epistemology of the Wunderkammer (the baroque cabinet of curiosities) and the ontology of the fold (as elaborated by Deleuze), challenges current assumptions about the nature of research and our understanding of the world.
Reflexive research and the (re)turn to the baroque is a contribution to the growing body of research located within the baroque, conceptualised not as a discrete historical period, but as a recurring cultural phenomenon, which presents as counter to the prevailing orthodoxy:
To the baroque mind the world is not conceived in logical Cartesian terms. To the contrary, it is full of contradictions. The baroque mind, moreover is acutely aware of the conflict between illusion and reality, and paradox and complexity are accepted as almost natural phenomena. (Leo Forkey)
It is essential reading (writes the author) for qualitative researchers and students concerned to develop innovative approaches in their work, as well as for those with an interest in identities and processes of identification.

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Preliminary Material
Pages: i–vii
Baroque
An oddly-shaped pearl
Pages: 5–15
Reflexivity
The location of participant self observation
Pages: 17–30
Methodology
Participant self observation and the turn to the baroque
Pages: 31–41
Representation
Realism and the baroque
Pages: 43–53
Data and analysis
The display and handling of research objects in the Wunderkammer
Pages: 55–92
Writing research
Suggestion and the quest for relative unclearness
Pages: 93–104
Validity
Text/image and the representation of self
Pages: 105–119
Endings
Unifying disunity
Pages: 121–125
Notes
Pages: 127–128
References
Pages: 129–137
Index
Pages: 139–143
Cate Watson is Director of the Master of Research programme and Depute Director of Research in the School of Education, University of Aberdeen, Scotland. Her main research interests are in professional and institutional identities, especially in relation to professionals working in children’s services, and the development of innovative approaches to qualitative research. She has recently co-edited (with Joan Forbes) Service integration in schools (also published by Sense).
Educational Researchers and their students
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