2017
DOI: 10.18251/ijme.v19i1.1258
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Employing Autoethnography to Examine Our Diverse Identities: Striving Towards Equitable and Socially Just Stances in Literacy Teaching and Research

Abstract: This paper brings together the storied experiences of a group of diverse scholars from Ghana, Uzbekistan, and the United States who use a collaborative autoethnographic lens to engage in the process of self-reflection/self-critique with respect to salient aspects of their identities (e.g., race, language, gender, socioeconomic status, and so forth). Each scholar also explores how her identity informs and influences her attitudes, behaviors, beliefs and actions with respect to the equitable enactment of her ped… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…These reflective writings of the outgoing students (one female and two males) provide a holistic picture of the cultural context and social flux that exist in Nigerian higher education. The distinct cultural identities of the reports are expected to substantiate the major themes of student experience from this part of the world [12].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 93%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These reflective writings of the outgoing students (one female and two males) provide a holistic picture of the cultural context and social flux that exist in Nigerian higher education. The distinct cultural identities of the reports are expected to substantiate the major themes of student experience from this part of the world [12].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…These approaches have been affirmed over time to be robust. However, recent dimensions of research methodology are now beginning to emphasize the reality that human identities are evolving, fluid and dynamic [12]. Consequently, ethnographic approaches resort to presentations of in-depth reflection and thoughtful self-critique to bring out storied experiences that represent broad social, political, cultural, geographical and historical contexts.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The specialness of women's refusal acts can also be seen in academic discourse context of female undergraduates in Central Sulawesi using a local language as a heritage language and language use. The variety of studies on speech acts in academic discourse becomes more important and interesting due to its continuity and synergy towards the previous study done [3]- [5] In the international level, similar research which studies on speech acts, gender, and ethnography of communication has been done [6]- [9] as well as on wide and multi-context scope the past research [10]. The refusal acts on spoken academic discourse by the ethnicity of Kaili, Buginesse, and Manado in Central Sulawesi is shaped by the use of body language, sign language, implicit meaning, and the traits of the local accents and dialects themselves.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Hernandez and colleagues (2017, p. 251) encapsulates, CAE gives us "permission to make our shadow selves visible in our scholarship in a distinctive analytic style". CAE is a democratic research process underpinned often by social justice and equity, enabling researchers to interrogate in safe, supportive ways, complex and sensitive issues (e.g., Brock et al, 2017). As a multivocal, rigorous research endeavor, multiple auto-ethnographers engage each other in data collection.…”
Section: Collaborative Autoethnography (Cae)mentioning
confidence: 99%