Self-Knowledge Creation Through Collective Poetic Inquiry: Cultivating Productive Resistance as University Academics

We explore how using the literary arts-based methodology of collective poetic inquiry deepened our own self-knowledge as South African academics who choose to resist a neoliberal corporate model of higher education. Increasingly, poetry is recognized as a means of representing the distinctiveness, c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cultural studies, critical methodologies critical methodologies, 2017-06, Vol.17 (3), p.262-265
Hauptverfasser: Pillay, Daisy, Pithouse-Morgan, Kathleen, Naicker, Inbanathan
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We explore how using the literary arts-based methodology of collective poetic inquiry deepened our own self-knowledge as South African academics who choose to resist a neoliberal corporate model of higher education. Increasingly, poetry is recognized as a means of representing the distinctiveness, complexity and plurality of the voices of research participants and researchers. Also, poetry is understood as a mode of research analysis that can intensify creativity and reflexivity. Using found poetry in the pantoum and tanka formats, we provide an example of a poetic inquiry process in which we started off by exploring other university academics’ lived experiences of working with graduate students and came to a turning point of reflexivity and self-realization. The escape highlights our evolving understanding that collaborative creativity and experimentation in research can be acts of self-knowledge creation for nurturing productive resistance as university academics.
ISSN:1532-7086
1552-356X
DOI:10.1177/1532708617706118