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Centre for Qualitative Research : BU by Dr Daniel DominguezVisiting Scholar, Dr. Daniel Domínguez, reports on his six-week sojourn to the Centre for Qualitative Research, Summer, 2006
An autoethnographic approach to fieldwork at the "Centre for Qualitative Research", Bournemouth University (England), Summer 2006 By Daniel Domínguez Figaredo Scientific motivations These questions and research topics have drawn me closer to the ethnographic method in the last few months, in an attempt to investigate more thoroughly the keys of behaviour as integral parts of cultural movements, whether they are susceptible to macro-analysis (the Internet as object of ethnographic study) or micro-analysis (the ethnographic analysis of virtual learning communities). Scientific motivations? The enrichment gained from culture shock, the exchange of ideas, the contrast of theories, the redefinition of concepts or the simple exposure to different points of view, are all reasons which more than justify the the evaluators' demands of internationalisation. Since I have been in the university system, I have, therefore, been greatly surprised by the suspicion with which departments view the trips abroad undertaken by their teachers/researchers. When I told my department of my desire to travel to Bournemouth, circumstances meant that I was only able to go in my own holiday time, that is to say, I couldn't go to a foreign research centre during my work time, even though it was an obligatory part of my work, but I had to comply with the legal demand that was part of my work by using my own holiday time. In my opinion, this is absurd. No doubt there are reasons of a cultural nature behind these practices and an ethnographic study would go a long way towards deciphering the reasons given to justify them. This is not the place for such an analysis, but rather for justifying the reasons for my trip in the summer of 2006 in the month of August and the first days of September. But where? Another important reason was that the destination would be an English-speaking country. My level of English is still not good and a long-term stay might help improve it. And, how? Kip Jones Kip Jones' web page Without a doubt, Kip Jones was the right person, and would be my contact for
the sojourn. Kipworld.net opens with the heading "Narrative Research &
'Performative' Social Science", just below Kip's name. In Spain there is
no tradition of scientific research into performative aspects. There is such
a tradition of research into art and artistic representation, though not so
much about qualitative research or how it can be represented or how it could
be applied in other areas of knowledge. My knowledge of the subject came from
lateral, non-academic areas, such as video art or cyber-performance, after visiting
certain artistic exhibitions in Spain and the Tate I began to discover Kip's real world in our first e-mail exchanges. Our conversations in these messages rarely touched on academic subjects, but rather were about sensations, images and evocations of places and spaces. Kip's imagination is concerned with image, representation, meaning, figuration, and experimentation and innovation in qualitative methods. He is a keen sea traveller and a lover of marine landscapes and I come from a coastal city in Spain, which meant that during our brief chats we often included photos and Web addresses of the beaches of Bournemouth or the Asturian coast (the region where I am from). This vision of Kip's is especially suitable for carrying out qualitative research. This accumulation of sensations constituted the baggage with which I arrived in Bournemouth. I already knew then that Kip Jones concentrated on things that were not normal in the scientific milieu which I came from. As I have said, everything around me was characterised by a tendency to seriousness and an absolute lack of risk-taking in research. ''Please, just pay attention and leave your remarks for later
'' In order for the video to generate these sensations it is necessary first of all to pay attention to the combination of images and sound. That is all that is needed. And that is what I did for only ten seconds. The first images acted upon me like a coiled spring. I wanted to know how Kip had been able to do something like that: --'Wowwww this is amazing, what programme did you use? Where did you find the images? How did you record the interview? Who are those women? It must have taken you a long time to do it, mustn't it? '. Kip was always unfailingly polite with me, but, at that moment, his face took on a serious aspect. He turned to me and said in a serious tone, 'Please, for the moment you only have to watch the film. I ask you to forget your views as a researcher and all your technical knowledge and concerns. For the moment they don't matter. Afterwards you can ask me what you want, but for the moment, just pay attention and leave your remarks for later! The important thing is what the images say to you, what you see in them and the sensations they provoke in you.' In his disinterested way, Kip had given me a magisterial lesson in Performative Social Science and, at the same time, in the goals of qualitative research. Constructing the field: the thin red line between '(cyber)field
' and
Dani-blog Following the canons of qualitative research, as well as the initial objectives, the idea of keeping a blog was open to being influenced by outside events. Indeed, this degree of uncertainty ended up being its greatest virtuality. By its very nature, employing a blog, whose contents are public on the Internet, is to record fieldwork that entails assuming a level of transparency - and of risk - having various implications in the development of research. Anyone can express an opinion on the text the researcher is writing, thereby altering the original discourse. The individuals who participate in the project also can see themselves in real time, deconstructed and dissected by the researcher who assigns their significations to them in a text which is open to the whole Web surfing community. This is exactly what happened with Kip. He was an agent in the action and my main source of inspiration for the posts in the blog. In a certain way, when he read my commentaries he was seeing himself reflected on the screen in a new, unexpected light. The interesting thing about the cycle of events was the play of interpretations itself. Kip read the posts in Spanish, a language he does not know. To understand them he used an online translator and the result caused several humorous misunderstandings. Thus there was an initial event, then my interpretation and a reading and reinterpretation on Kip's part with the help of the translator. Everyone at Bournemouth willingly accepted my field journal on the Web, so
much so that Kip nicknamed me 'Dani-blog'. It had such an impact that the delight
of the Bournemouth researchers marked a new milestone in my learning process.
I remember that I commented to a colleague from my university on my research
proposal and the use of the blog. I
showed him a post "Pretty amazing" The Bournemouth Qualitative Research Conference takes place every two years and is headed by the staff of the Centre for Qualitative Research of Bournemouth: Immy Holloway, Les Todres, Kathleen Galvin and Kip Jones. The event was dedicated to discussions and applications of qualitative methods in health and social care; many professionals from a variety of disciplines return to Bournemouth every two years for this engaging conference. My own interest in the congress was my curiosity about the methodological and knowledge transferences in the various areas. I was also interested in knowing how the performative (with its own space within the conference) could be applied specifically, for instance, in therapies and the treatment of concrete pathologies. In fact, the main conclusion that I obtained, after the three days of the congress, was how classic qualitative methods and innovations (in this case, in the form of performative methods) are either using analogical or digital tools in order to awaken the interest of service users as well as professionals by investigating the use of multimedia as a dissemination tool. The conclusion of both these events reinforced and, in practice, contrasted with my former perceptions. It was in the Masterclass, however, that I confirmed my impression that it is also possible to do things differently in regards to conducting group dynamics in a learning session, i.e., in a situation of structured face-to-face learning. Certainly, the topic was conducive to an unconventional teaching approach, but even so, Halling's emphasis managed to disorientate me completely. The method was based on surrendering the initiative to the experiences and impressions of the audience, rather than to the knowledge of the expert who is giving the class this approach is highly unusual for someone of my background. Steen Halling is a renowned expert in the subject, but he hadn't even bothered to make a PowerPoint presentation; he was supposed to have many years of experience in research, but he had only used a couple of generic articles as preparatory material for the session. His procedure was innovative and yet, he did not cite recent advances or the work of other colleagues in the vanguard of knowledge. Something is wrong, I thought. The man is pulling our leg. Of course, this was not the case. The key seemed to be that Halling had perfectly interiorised the sense of his speech, which was exactly his intention. He needed, therefore, no other material than the learning process which would be generated by the methodological proposal, phenomenological in this case. There was no content which was the 'key' to knowledge on this occasion. The process would be participative and it was the audience who would construct the practices, offer some results and suggest their own conclusions. All this was unique to this occasion. It was localised and contextualised. It is impossible to replicate the process, merely to attempt to do it in a similar way. The content is written in the act, not given beforehand. Merely by following a basic didactic principle, suiting means (methodologies) to ends (learning), Halling had done something which breaks with the canons followed by these types of sessions in my experience. Naturally, this involves renouncing pre-arranged structures and designing intervention in a specific way for each new framework. Halling frequently used a catchphrase to stress a relevant fact: 'This is pretty amazing', he would repeat insistently. The same expression was going round in my head when I left the Masterclass. In my case it applied to the experience I had just lived through. In fact, this catchphrase applied to the entire six weeks I had just lived through too. It was pretty amazing, the whole thing, pretty amazing. Daniel Domínguez Figaredo Dpto. Teoría de la Educación y Pedagogía Social Tel.: 609862508 |
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