Method Meets Art: Arts Based Research Practice – Patricia Leavy

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Author: Patricia Leavy
Publisher: The Guilford Press
Year of Publication: 2020
Print Length: 344 pages
Genre: Non-Fiction / Cultural Studies
Topic: Culture & Society, Family
Ideal for courses in multiple disciplines, the third edition of this award-winning text has been revised and updated with new topics, examples, and guiding questions to introduce each chapter’s sections.
Patricia Leavy presents a practical guide to the full range of arts-based research (ABR) genres–narrative inquiry, fiction-based research, poetry, music, dance, theatre, film, and visual art. Each genre-specific chapter is paired with an exemplary research article or online video link (at the companion website).
Following a consistent format, chapters review how the technique was developed, explore its methodological variations and the kind of research questions it can address, and describe diverse sample studies. Checklists and practical advice help readers harness the power of these innovative techniques for their own studies or dissertations.
Table of Contents
Author’s Note /
Preface: A Patron Saint
1. The Synthesis Problem
2. Fabulation
1988
3. Disciplines and Disciples
4. Aphorism as a Promise
2002
5. Heartbreak as Praxis
6. Whether Wisdom
2004
The Quene A Mervilos and Magiquall Tale of epistemological Mischief, Wherein there are revealed no secretes
2006
8. When Courts of Love Have Cash Registers
1976
9. Auctions
10. Uncertainty and Bathing
2010
2013
11. After Hypervigilance
2017
12. Choreography
Acknowledgments
SELECTED Bibliography
1. The Synthesis Problem
2. Fabulation
1988
3. Disciplines and Disciples
4. Aphorism as a Promise
2002
5. Heartbreak as Praxis
6. Whether Wisdom
2004
7. Before and After
2006
8. When Courts of Love Have Cash Registers
1976
9. Auctions
10. Uncertainty and Bathing
2010
11. After Hypervigilance
2017
12. Choreography
Acknowledgments
Notes

Monica Huerta is a critic, curator, scholar, and editor. She works across mediums to amplify freer futures and the courage to make them real. Alongside visionary makers, she learns from minoritarian histories of sensing the world otherwise to unearth new possibilities in the present. Her current projects explore contemporary Latinx photography, anti-capitalist fairy tales, and the art of sports. Essays appear in ArtForum, Society + Space, Intervenxions, Los Angeles Review of Books, Contemporaries, Women & Performance, and many peer-reviewed academic journals.
Source: https://english.princeton.edu/people/monica-huerta
More from Monica Huerta in this library, click here.