Addressing the distinct orientations critical and postcritical ethnographies take, the book illuminates how different authors think, enact, and represent their critical and postcritical/post-critical work. In this way the book is pedagogical within and across each chapter. Each contributor has produced a chapter that includes a brief summary of their respective long-term inquiry project with emphases on relation in the being, doing, and theorizing of qualitative research. Contributors discuss their navigation of commitments across the arc of their research and engage critical social theory, interrogating issues of power and ideology. Each chapter includes retrospective analytical reflections on the long-term ethnographic work contributors completed. The chapters address interpretivist commitments to emic analyses, metaphor, and representation and each contributor’s personal and professional commitments to equity and justice. The chapters engage critical social theories, crip horizons, critical race theory, and queer theory, as well as critical and queer pedagogies, de/colonialism, and post-humanism. A summary chapter addresses key issues in contemporary postcritical/post-critical qualitative research.
The book is designed to prepare novice qualitative researchers to craft, conduct, and represent postcritical/post-critical qualitative research. The book provides guidance for researchers who are interested in social critique, equity, and justice and who seek to avoid the failures in the last quarter of the 20th Century of critical ethnography.
Allison Daniel Anders, PhD, is an associate professor in the educational foundations and inquiry program and the qualitative research program at the University of South Carolina, USA. She studies critical and postcritical ethnography and contexts of education. Her work addresses the everyday experiences of children, families, and communities, and issues of access, equity, and justice.
George W. Noblit, PhD, is the Joseph R. Neikirk Professor of Sociology of Education Emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA. His scholarship has won awards from the American Educational Research Association, the American Educational Studies Association, the International Reading Association and the Society of Professors of Education. He is a well-known qualitative research methodologist and author and editor of many books either on, or using, qualitative methods.