Reflections of a black woman practitioner-researcher |
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Authors: | Marcia Morgan |
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Affiliation: | Her Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service, UK |
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Abstract: | Poetry as a tool for research reflectivity is used in this article to explore the individual and personal experience of a black woman researcher-practitioner, working and studying in two white male-dominated organisations—the British Prison Service and a university institution. The discussion will trace how she reconciled her multiple identities and how these identities shaped her perception of her gender-racial group, prison culture, and university culture. An interpretive creative poem that reflects the author’s attempt at capturing the essence of her experience as a prison service employee is presented. The author then examines an excerpt from her journal alongside an in-depth qualitative interview extract and discusses her interpretive comments. The article discusses the issues related to the author’s outsider-within position, a result of her gender and racial minority status, and highlights how poetry allowed her to articulate the anxiety and tension caused by her multiple identities. |
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Keywords: | Defense mechanism gender gender racialisation intersectionality poetry practitioner-researcher race |
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