Ethics and practices of re‐presentation: Witnessing self and other |
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Authors: | Kathie Crocket |
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Affiliation: | Department of Human Development and Counselling, University of Waikato, , Hamilton, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Context: The challenge of producing ethical representational practices is of critical interest to both practitioner‐researchers and research theorists. For practitioners becoming researchers a central ethical question may be how to manage a relational presence in writing their research, in ways that acknowledge participants, the research relationship, and a researcher's own subjectivity. Focus: The article offers examples from practitioner research to illustrate and theorise how researcher subjectivity is managed through the use of witnessing practices as a representational strategy. Witnessing practices – translated into counselling research from narrative therapy – offer researchers a strategy to take up a reflexive, relational presence in research reports. Discussion: Researcher witnessing honours the contributions of research participants as well as making visible the shaping effects of the research on a researcher's life. Through witnessing self and other, and thus declaring presence, privilege and partiality, re‐presentational ethics are made transparent. |
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Keywords: | counselling research research ethics researcher subjectivity witnessing reflexivity |
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