diffractive ethnography educational research environmental education qualitative methodologies posthuman
Diffractive ethnography is a divergent methodology in educational research that seeks to enact posthuman thinking, in particular, the concept of diffraction as a methodological approach, through the application of ethnographic methods. In this paper, we consider how we can rethink the humanistic tendencies of qualitative methodologies in educational research to more authentically embrace nonhuman other and in doing so, offer new methods in undertaking ethnography diffractively. This methodological approach offers a way to undertake qualitative, educational research by drawing on conventional and rigorous ethnographic methods framed through posthuman theory that enable thinking and knowledge generation beyond the scope of current practices. We present a suite of eight principles of diffractive data entanglements informed by the diffractive ethnographic methodology and explore how these may be put to work in practice in educational research. Through demonstrating diffractive ethnography in practice, we grapple with the humanist focus of ethnographies by troubling the human as central to educational research and instead, include the entanglements of all materiality.
Details
Title
Diffractive ethnography: a divergent methodology in educational research
Creators
Simone Blom - Southern Cross University
Alexandra Lasczik - Southern Cross University
Amy Cutter-Mackenzie-Knowles - Southern Cross University
Publication Details
Australian Educational Researcher, Vol.52(3), pp.2751-2777
Publisher
Springer Nature
Number of pages
27
Grant note
Open Access funding enabled and organized by CAUL and its Member Institutions.