Abstract
In Chap. 2, we explore how stories are discursively produced. We examine the links between stories, contexts and discourses, and our emphasis in this chapter is to explore how a story might be engaged with via a discourse analysis methodology.
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Troubling Invitation 2: Knowing From?
Troubling Invitation 2: Knowing From?
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Where do you know X from?
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Where do others know X from?
As we discussed in the first troubling section, narratives are engaged with and known from particular places.
Invitation: After having read this chapter and AV’s story we invite you to again think about tertiary education , sexual identity and gender identity. Jot down a series of words that capture some of your thoughts regarding what you think is significant about tertiary education , sexuality and gender identity. What do these words reveal to you regarding where you are thinking from?
Readers might now consider the following:
Are you aware that you have come to know AV’s narrative from somewhere other than the place you initially identified in Troubling Invitation 1?
Michael: I think we’ve done a lot of work in that chapter—and in this invitation section.
Mic: Yes, we’ve covered a lot of ground.
Michael: Hopefully readers are seeing that the way they frame a story might function as a limit, and by implication that if they broaden their framings, this can lend itself to possibilities, not just possibilities located in the future but new ways with story now, a now that if we multiply by time becomes the future.
Mic: I agree and thinking about knowing frames also provides opportunities and possibilities for understanding stories in different and productive ways.
Michael: Yes and I think it’s appropriate to locate this difference —these troubling sections address the reader, the reader that we hope to trouble.
Mic: And two other things come to mind for me and one is that when the reader troubles their knowing frame they might think about what they are drawing upon to do this troubling and that discourses that trouble don’t originate with them.
Michael: Troubling is an effect—and like all effects it is discursively produced.
Mic: My second point is that as well as knowing about knowing frames that people can also think critically about the politics of different ways of knowing—while we’re not using critical theory (Freire, 1999) as it would usually be applied in this book—we don’t shy away from the evaluative edge.
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Crowhurst, M., Emslie, M. (2018). Discourse Analysis. In: Working Creatively with Stories and Learning Experiences. Creativity, Education and the Arts. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69754-3_2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69754-3_2
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