- Advanced Praise for The Oxford Handbook of <i>Methods for Public Scholarship</i>
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- About the Editor
- Contributors
- Introduction to <i>The Oxford Handbook of Methods for Public Scholarship</i>
- The 21st-Century Academic Landscape: from a disciplinary to a transdisciplinary model
- Public Scholarship, Public Intellectuals, and the Role of Higher Education in a Time of Crisis
- Composing an Undivided Life as an Activist/Scholar: methods for practicing engaged social movement scholarship
- Ethical Issues Working with Vulnerable Populations
- Ethical Challenges Community-Based Researchers and Community-Based Organizations Face: can we still work together?
- The Impossible Task of Community Art Practice: a methodological micro-guide for seven young chicagoans
- For the Sake of Humanity: research on cross-cultural collaborative arts for public health
- (Un)Settling Imagined Lands: a par/des(i) approach to de/colonizing methodologies
- Disaster Research: past, present, and future
- Interviews: using conversations in public scholarship
- Public Ethnography
- Oral History, the Public Record, and the Story
- Literature and Creative Writing as Public Scholarship
- Health TheatRe: embodying research
- Narrative Film as Public Scholarship
- Visual Art Campaigns
- Cellphilms in Public Scholarship
- Online, Asynchronous Data Collection in Qualitative Research
- #spacesforknowledgeproduction
- Public Scholarship Goes Online: email as method
- Audience and Voice (and Sometimes Reflexivity)
- Creative Nonfiction in Qualitative Inquiry
- Writing Collaboratively
- Academic Blogs
- Academics Writing for a Broader Public Audience
- Generating Publicity and Engaging with the Media to Promote Academic Research
- Grant Writing as a Creative Process: methods from brainstorming to project building, management, and completion
- Growing the Revolutionary Intellectual, Creating the Counterpublic Sphere
- A Brief Statement on the Future of Public Scholarship and the Research Methods Landscape
- Index
Abstract and Keywords
Despite continued appeals by funding bodies, universities, and academy-based professional organizations to engage in knowledge mobilization, few academic researchers have made convincing and sustained efforts to dismantle the existing dominant power architecture that orders and organizes professional merit hierarchies along the lines of publication prestige (as indicated by the reputation of publishers) rather than on the basis of readership size or publication impact. The authors encourage more academics to write for a broader public audience. After highlighting a few common reasons why so much academic writing fails to engage readers beyond specialist audiences, the authors turn to the stories of five academic writers whose books have reached hundreds of thousands of people. These five books were selected because they were published within the last 10 years, were widely read, and were based in a qualitative, ethnographic research approach. Because they wished to reflect on the unique conditions shaping work within institutions of higher education, the authors excluded journalists and professional writers and included only university faculty. The authors interviewed these five authors, asking them about their writing styles, their publication-related experiences, and the production and distribution processes of their work.
Keywords: ethnography, field research, qualitative research, audiences, bestselling books, public scholarship, public sociology
Phillip Vannini Royal Roads University Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Sarah Abbott University of Regina Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
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- Advanced Praise for The Oxford Handbook of <i>Methods for Public Scholarship</i>
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- About the Editor
- Contributors
- Introduction to <i>The Oxford Handbook of Methods for Public Scholarship</i>
- The 21st-Century Academic Landscape: from a disciplinary to a transdisciplinary model
- Public Scholarship, Public Intellectuals, and the Role of Higher Education in a Time of Crisis
- Composing an Undivided Life as an Activist/Scholar: methods for practicing engaged social movement scholarship
- Ethical Issues Working with Vulnerable Populations
- Ethical Challenges Community-Based Researchers and Community-Based Organizations Face: can we still work together?
- The Impossible Task of Community Art Practice: a methodological micro-guide for seven young chicagoans
- For the Sake of Humanity: research on cross-cultural collaborative arts for public health
- (Un)Settling Imagined Lands: a par/des(i) approach to de/colonizing methodologies
- Disaster Research: past, present, and future
- Interviews: using conversations in public scholarship
- Public Ethnography
- Oral History, the Public Record, and the Story
- Literature and Creative Writing as Public Scholarship
- Health TheatRe: embodying research
- Narrative Film as Public Scholarship
- Visual Art Campaigns
- Cellphilms in Public Scholarship
- Online, Asynchronous Data Collection in Qualitative Research
- #spacesforknowledgeproduction
- Public Scholarship Goes Online: email as method
- Audience and Voice (and Sometimes Reflexivity)
- Creative Nonfiction in Qualitative Inquiry
- Writing Collaboratively
- Academic Blogs
- Academics Writing for a Broader Public Audience
- Generating Publicity and Engaging with the Media to Promote Academic Research
- Grant Writing as a Creative Process: methods from brainstorming to project building, management, and completion
- Growing the Revolutionary Intellectual, Creating the Counterpublic Sphere
- A Brief Statement on the Future of Public Scholarship and the Research Methods Landscape
- Index