2021
DOI: 10.1097/ans.0000000000000387
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Patterns of Knowing and Being in the COVIDicene

Abstract: The crucible of the COVIDicene distills critical issues for nursing knowledge as we navigate our dystopian present while unpacking our oppressive past and reimagining a radical future. Using Barbara Carper's patterns of knowing as a jumping-off point, the authors instigate provocations around traditional disciplinary theorizing for how to value, ground, develop, and position knowledge as nurses. The pandemic has presented nurses with opportunities to shift toward creating a more inclusive and just epistemology… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Queer patterns of knowing are particularly salient within the COVIDicene (Brown et al, 2022) which exposes the epistemological and ontological limitations of the Anthropocene. As Ebru Yetiskin (2022) notes the pandemic "has been predominantly embedded within biopower" which demonstrates control mechanisms of governments over populations.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Queer patterns of knowing are particularly salient within the COVIDicene (Brown et al, 2022) which exposes the epistemological and ontological limitations of the Anthropocene. As Ebru Yetiskin (2022) notes the pandemic "has been predominantly embedded within biopower" which demonstrates control mechanisms of governments over populations.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ALL patterns of knowing are required for meaningful nursing care, not just those that are easily and conveniently quantified, counted, or capitalized. (Brown et al, 2022, p. 8)…”
Section: Themes and Constructsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In clinging to assumptions of humanism, nurses risk becoming like windup toys making the same futile motions, failing to keep pace with the changes around us (Dillard‐Wright et al, 2020; Latour, 2004). As threads to FNM and CPH weave into nursing discourse, we imagine multiple paths forward for creative and relational posthuman discovery, coproducing knowledge alongside communities with antiracist, anticolonial, queer ways of knowing that incorporate resistance, protest, art, culture, polyphonic connections to nature and all matter human and non (such as in Adam et al, 2021; Blaine Brown et al, 2022; Hopkins‐Walsh et al, 2022; Smith & Willis, 2020).…”
Section: In/conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%