ERIC Number: ED664754
Record Type: Non-Journal
Publication Date: 2024
Pages: 236
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: 979-8-3468-5481-4
ISSN: N/A
EISSN: N/A
Monsters, Multiplicities, and Liminal Experiences in Doctoral Education: Fabulation as Research Methodology
Anna V. Gonzalez
ProQuest LLC, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of South Florida
The purpose of this dissertation was to experiment with qualitative research methodologies while exploring the complexities of doctoral education, research practices, philosophies of inquiry, and other topics intersecting with(in) educational scholarship. My vision for this work was fueled by postmodernist critiques of humanist education, frustrations with the methodological status quo pervasive in educational research, and deep concerns about the unsustainability of performance-focused teaching and learning. The logic I follow in this project is simple: if we--researchers and academics--are to contribute solutions for challenges and ongoing crises in our world, then we must start thinking relationally and in ways more complex than the increasingly fast tempo of academic life typically affords. Moreover, learning to think differently requires scrutiny of already familiar assumptions, theories, desires, and truths, and then, it also needs play and freedom to (re)imagine reality. In my dissertation, I do just that: play, (re)imagine, and scrutinize educational research and doctoral education. The experimental methodology of this project was inspired by Paul Stenner's work on fabulation and liminal experiences (2017, 2018). By virtue of fabulation's inherent incompatibility with objective truths pursued in positivist social science, I was able to explore ambiguous spaces that conventional research methods cannot reach, such as rifts between "reality" and "fantasy," "individual" and "community," "human" and "not-human," "theory" and "practice," "science" and "art," and between other dualisms that are taken for granted in contemporary social sciences. The theme of this play/arts-based inquiry is doctoral student experiences studied with the help of process philosophies and liminality theories as experiences of emergence. The study unfolded as a first-person dialogue with imaginary (fabulated) monsters responsible for anxieties, fears, and apprehensions familiar to all doctoral students and theorized with Cohen's Monster Theses (1996) as informants capable of revealing to us humans truths about ourselves. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://bibliotheek.ehb.be:2222/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Research Methodology, Educational Experiments, Qualitative Research, Scholarship, Educational Research, Inquiry, Research and Development, Theory Practice Relationship, Barriers, Change Strategies, Student Experience, Play, Doctoral Students, Art, Transformative Learning
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Publication Type: Dissertations/Theses - Doctoral Dissertations
Education Level: Higher Education; Postsecondary Education
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: N/A
Authoring Institution: N/A
Grant or Contract Numbers: N/A