Writing Ourselves at Risk: Using Self-narrative in Working for Social Justice

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Abstract

I have recently been thinking of how to be "virtuous" as I engage in doing qualitative research for social justice. In this essay, I explore the complexities and risks involved in representing the researcher-self amidst competing (and perhaps false) dichotomies of the personal/professional life and the scholar/activist. To do so, I deconstruct places in my scholarship where I was willing (consciously and unconsciously) to take risks, where I took risks but was socialized to conform, where I am still unwilling to take the risk and where I am currently writing the risky. The goal is to create a dialogue about the perplexities that surround representing the "researcher self" with goals for social justice. © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Johnson, C. W. (2009). Writing Ourselves at Risk: Using Self-narrative in Working for Social Justice. Leisure Sciences, 31(5), 483–489. https://doi.org/10.1080/01490400903199815

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