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  • Post-qualitative inquiry and the new materialist turn: implications for sport, health and physical culture research

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    Fullagar176473-Accepted.pdf (271.7Kb)
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    Accepted Manuscript (AM)
    Author(s)
    Fullagar, Simone
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Fullagar, Simone P.
    Year published
    2017
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    Abstract
    In this article, I examine the ‘turn to’ post-qualitative inquiry (PQI), new materialism and post-humanist theories to consider the challenges of, and implications for, doing research in sport, health and physical culture. The term ‘post-qualitative inquiry’ indicates a decisive departure from the ethico-onto-epistemological assumptions that have informed the humanist interpretive tradition of qualitative research. Moving beyond a theory/method divide, PQI draws its methodological inspiration from critical post-humanist debates concerned with how ‘matter’ is thought and constituted through entanglements of human and non-human ...
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    In this article, I examine the ‘turn to’ post-qualitative inquiry (PQI), new materialism and post-humanist theories to consider the challenges of, and implications for, doing research in sport, health and physical culture. The term ‘post-qualitative inquiry’ indicates a decisive departure from the ethico-onto-epistemological assumptions that have informed the humanist interpretive tradition of qualitative research. Moving beyond a theory/method divide, PQI draws its methodological inspiration from critical post-humanist debates concerned with how ‘matter’ is thought and constituted through entanglements of human and non-human bodies, affects, objects and practices. Such a shift reorients thinking around relational questions about the material-discursive forces co-implicated in what bodies can ‘do’ and how matter ‘acts’, rather than a concern with what ‘is’ a body or the agentic meaning of experience. I discuss how these new styles of thought reorient our onto-epistemological assumptions and theory–method approaches through engagement with PQI within (and beyond) sport, health and physical culture scholarship.
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    Journal Title
    Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health
    Volume
    9
    Issue
    2
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1080/2159676X.2016.1273896
    Funder(s)
    ARC
    Grant identifier(s)
    DP0556131
    Copyright Statement
    © 2017 Taylor & Francis (Routledge). This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health on 08 Jan 2017, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/2159676X.2016.1273896
    Subject
    Sports science and exercise
    Specialist studies in education
    Sociology
    Social Sciences
    Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
    Social Sciences - Other Topics
    Post-qualitative inquiry
    post-humanism
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/388632
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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