Travels with Ernest: Crossing the Literary/Sociological DivideRowman Altamira, 23 d’abr. 2004 - 272 pàgines In Travels with Ernest: Crossing the Literary/Sociological Divide, Laurel Richardson and Ernest Lockridge_accomplished sociologist and published novelist_explore the fascinating interplay between literary and ethnographic writing. The exciting result is an intriguing experimental text that simultaneously delves into, reveals, simplifies, and complicates methodologies of writing and conveying experience. Refusing to force their unique voices into one integrated account, the authors_also spouses_explicate their stories in separate narratives and then discuss in transcribed 'free-wheeling' conversations their different constructions of their travels together, travels simultaneously experienced, but recalled and related differently through the filters of distinct professional perceptions, life histories, and interiors. This boundary-crossing text will provide an ideal platform for students and professors interested in understanding and exploring the absorbing complexities and possibilities of ethnographic writing and creative nonfiction. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 42.
Pàgina
... stories ; literary modes of descriptive scene setting , dialogue , and un- folding action ; and inclusion of the author's subjective reactions , involve- ment in the research process , and strategies for practicing reflexive fieldwork ...
... stories ; literary modes of descriptive scene setting , dialogue , and un- folding action ; and inclusion of the author's subjective reactions , involve- ment in the research process , and strategies for practicing reflexive fieldwork ...
Pàgina 1
... story of two people who love each other , their work , and their lives . Both Ernest and I think of writing as a method of discovery — a way to learn about one's self and one's world . In Travels , our discoveries build on each other ...
... story of two people who love each other , their work , and their lives . Both Ernest and I think of writing as a method of discovery — a way to learn about one's self and one's world . In Travels , our discoveries build on each other ...
Pàgina 4
... story goes that back in 1850 , when those who stayed behind in the Valley were finally rescued , one of their number , a woman , looked back over her shoulder and said , “ Good- bye , Death Valley . " In Death Valley death is a serious ...
... story goes that back in 1850 , when those who stayed behind in the Valley were finally rescued , one of their number , a woman , looked back over her shoulder and said , “ Good- bye , Death Valley . " In Death Valley death is a serious ...
Pàgina 10
... story either way . ” We're cresting the rise . “ Here's . . . another . . . one , ” says Laurel , laboring to breathe . Confronting us now is a chaotic fast - moving body of water with in- numerable rushing , gurgling rivulets and ...
... story either way . ” We're cresting the rise . “ Here's . . . another . . . one , ” says Laurel , laboring to breathe . Confronting us now is a chaotic fast - moving body of water with in- numerable rushing , gurgling rivulets and ...
Pàgina 17
... stories , lives , deaths . " Yes , " he says . We veer off the hiking trail into an overgrown clearing . Fallen , scat- tered , are gravestones , plain , uncarved . No need to carve the names of the dead on stones for family knows who ...
... stories , lives , deaths . " Yes , " he says . We veer off the hiking trail into an overgrown clearing . Fallen , scat- tered , are gravestones , plain , uncarved . No need to carve the names of the dead on stones for family knows who ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Travels with Ernest: Crossing the Literary/sociological Divide Laurel Richardson,Ernest Lockridge Previsualització limitada - 2004 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
Akiva alluvial fan American Anna asks Laurel Aunt Lillian Beirut Bella Abzug Canyon Carolyn castle conversation Copenhagen dacha Danish daughter Death Valley Denmark Don CeSar door Dubbya Dublin Ernest Lockridge Ernest says ethnographic experience eyes father feel feminist Grandpa green head hike Ireland Irish Ivan James Joyce Jean-Paul Jewish Joyce Kate Moss Laurel asks Laurel Richardson Laurel says Leopold Bloom literary Little Mermaid living look lost Martello tower mother mountain movie Nadia narrative never night Ohio Okay parking Pete Beach Peter Lorre Petrozavodsk Raintree County retirement Rock Russia says Laurel Sedona seminar Shenandoah sociology Stephen Dedalus stone story talk teaching tell thanks There's thing trail truth trying turn Tyrrell Tyrrellspass Ulysses University voice walk wall what's woman women wonder writing Yale Yeats