Reflexivity in research teams through narrative practice and textile-making

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Abstract

This article discusses narrative practice and textile-making as two techniques of researcher reflexivity in diverse teams conducting qualitative-interpretive research. Specifically, it suggests definitional ceremonies—a collective structured method of storytelling and group resonances—as a useful tool to interweave diverse researchers as a team, while maintaining the plurivocity that enables deeper reflexivity. Additionally, textile-making is introduced as a material and embodied way of expression, which complements narrative practice where words fail or need a non-linguistic form of elicitation. We illustrate the two techniques with examples from our international, collaborative qualitative-interpretive research project with demobilized guerrilla fighters in Colombia.

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Arias López, B. E., Andrä, C., & Bliesemann de Guevara, B. (2023). Reflexivity in research teams through narrative practice and textile-making. Qualitative Research, 23(2), 306–312. https://doi.org/10.1177/14687941211028799

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