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Session Type: Symposium
This session considers critical inquiry that directly engages with notions of truth-telling and social justice. Critical work necessarily situates inquiry within an assumed responsibility for the public good: one thus engages in inquiry practices in order to promote a more socially-just society. This alignment of inquiry with social justice productively challenges the use of critical, a term too easily (and simplistically) invoked in contemporary educational discourse. Given these assumptions, this session has two purposes: 1) to provocatively challenge methodological work through papers that address how inquiry might be differently “critical” if we begin from notions of truth/the good and 2) to illustrate diverse responses to truth-telling from specific inquiry traditions and consider how they intersect or depart from one another.
Getting Intimate: The Promise and Problems of Bringing Love Into Qualitative Research - Crystal T. Laura, Chicago State University
Illuminating Truth-Telling in Education Through Intersectional and Qualitative Research Methods - Jill Robinson
Dropping My Anchor Here: Working With Truth Claims Within and Beyond Academia - Kakali Bhattacharya, Kansas State University
"I Do Activist Things Even Though I'm Nothing": Deleuze's Philosophy as Method for Critical Ethnography on Latino Youth Activists - Sophia Rodriguez, College of Charleston