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Article

Haunting and the knowing and showing of qualitative research

Details

Citation

Wilson S (2018) Haunting and the knowing and showing of qualitative research. Sociological Review, 66 (6), pp. 1209-1225. https://doi.org/10.1177/0038026118769843

Abstract
This article focuses on the representation of qualitative sociological research to academic and non-academic audiences. It argues that a broader, ethically informed consideration of the communication of findings is required, rather than the current, audit-shaped approach, to do justice to complex (affective) data and to research participants. An important catalyst for this article is the concern that the current predominance of peer-reviewed articles may contribute, however unintentionally, to the maintenance of stigmatizing social imaginaries of groups including marginalized young people. This article draws on interdisciplinary sources to extend Avery Gordon¡¯s work on haunting to the representation of research. It contends that research ¡®outputs¡¯ can ¡®haunt¡¯, or stay with and produce empathy in their audience, by communicating the ¡®seething absences¡¯ that trace the everyday effects of power affectively and by highlighting the ¡®complex personhood¡¯ of those affected. The possibilities of such an approach are illustrated through consideration of textual and visual representations of findings from a project that explored understandings of ¡®belonging¡¯ among young people in state care, and particularly a short film, co-produced with, and featuring, a participant. While ¡®representation¡¯ is employed here primarily in an everyday sense, this article discusses ¡®non¡¯ or ¡®more than¡¯ representational approaches, while advocating a strategic negotiation with representation in relation to social justice.

Keywords
audit culture; automatic anonymity; Avery Gordon; ethics; haunting; representations of research; visual methods; young people;

Journal
Sociological Review: Volume 66, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date01/11/2018
Publication date online13/04/2018
Date accepted by journal04/03/2018
URL
PublisherSAGE
ISSN0038-0261
eISSN1467-954X

People (1)

Dr Sarah Wilson

Dr Sarah Wilson

Senior Lecturer, Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology

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