Synopses & Reviews
What does it mean to be a responsible methodologist? Certainly it is more than being a research middle-manager who ensures that the tools used in a thesis or dissertation are of the right gauge. In The Responsible Methodologist, leading education scholar Aaron Kuntz uses the latest movements in social theory to challenge qualitative researchers to reconceptualize their work away from the technocratic toward an intervention, an ethical disruption of the norm, an activist stance toward progressive social change. Inviting creativity and vision, he insists that the responsible methodologist become a force leading the discourse toward social justice. His book
-challenges the technocratic role given to qualitative methodologists in university settings;
-urges them to become a force for change through Foucaultand#8217;s parrhesia, risky truth-telling;
-includes research projects that have incorporated this vision.
Review
andldquo;Aaron Kuntz has written a stunning critique of technocratic social science methodology that ignores both its historical and political entanglements as well as its theoretical commitments. He reminds us that methodology is thinkable (or not) only within specific onto-epistemological formations and cannot be applied willy-nilly from one study to another as has become all too common in educational research.andrdquo;
andmdash;Elizabeth A. St. Pierre, University of Georgia
Review
andquot;Finally we have something to cite when discussing methodologistsandrsquo; responsibilities and qualitative inquiry as a political act! This book offers well-structured arguments and lovely theoretical insights related to the ways in which methodologists who take their work seriously move beyond the question of procedure when approaching methodological knowing and scholarship. I highly recommend this book for all interested in expanding their perspectives on methodological responsibilities of scholars who teach and study methods.andquot;
andmdash;Mirka Koro-Ljungberg, Arizona State University
Review
andquot;This dangerous methods book puts Foucault to good work in contesting neoliberal proceduralism and addressing ethically activist research in a critical materialist moment.andquot;
andmdash;Patti Lather, Ohio State University, emerita
Synopsis
Aaron Kuntz challenges qualitative researchers to reconceptualize methodological work away from the technocratic toward an intervention for progressive social change. Inviting creativity and vision, and featuring studies that have incorporated these characteristics, he insists that the responsible methodologist become a force akin to parrhesia, Foucaultand#8217;s risky truth-tellers.
Synopsis
Winner of The University of Alabama 2017 President's Faculty Research Award
What does it mean to be a responsible methodologist? Certainly it is more than being a research middle-manager who ensures that the tools used in a thesis or dissertation are of the right gauge. In The Responsible Methodologist, leading education scholar Aaron Kuntz uses the latest movements in social theory to challenge qualitative researchers to reconceptualize their work away from the technocratic toward an intervention, an ethical disruption of the norm, an activist stance toward progressive social change. Inviting creativity and vision, he insists that the responsible methodologist become a force leading the discourse toward social justice. His book-challenges the technocratic role given to qualitative methodologists in university settings;-urges them to become a force for change through Foucault's parrhesia, risky truth-telling;-includes research projects that have incorporated this vision.
http: //amkuntz.people.ua.edu/
About the Author
Aaron M. Kuntz is Department Head, Educational Studies in Psychology, Research Methodology, and Counseling, and Associate Professor of Educational Studies at the University of Alabama. He serves as Program Coordinator for the PhD in Educational Research and teaches graduate courses in qualitative inquiry and foundations of education. His research interests include critical qualitative inquiry, academic activism and citizenship, critical geography, and philosophy of education. Kuntzand#8217;s publications appear in such diverse journals as Qualitative Inquiry, Cultural Studies-Critical Methodologies, Journal of Language and Politics, The Journal of Higher Education, The Review of Higher Education, International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, Higher Education Policy, and others. He co-authored Qualitative Inquiry for Equity in Higher Education: Methodological Implications, Negotiations, and Responsibilities (Jossey-Bass) and co-edited with John Petrovic the volume Citizenship Education: Global Perspectives, Local Practices (Routledge). He received his doctorate in education from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 2. Logics of Extraction 3. Materialism and Critical Materialism 4. Methodological Parrhesia: Truth-telling 5. Methodological Materiality: Toward Productive Social Change Notes References Index About the Author