Norman K. Denzin’s newest text, <i>Interpretive Autoethnography,</i> intricately blends the best of <i>Interpretive Biography</i> (1989) and <i>Interpretive Interactionism </i>(2001). It is a must read for advanced, seriously committed narrative, autoethnographic researchers and writers. Denzin succeeds at making autoethnographic terminology accessible. Crisp accounts illustrate the abundance of terms and characteristics. Writers now have a means to write with new and varied eyes elevating participants’ voices. Stories blend histories, cultures, drama and myriad other features that Denzin illuminates to add sincerity to text.
- Lois McFadyen Christensen,
This is a groundbreaking and visionary text for anyone interested in autoethnography, personal experience, and life story research.
- Tony E. Adams,
Denzin′s <em>Interpretive Autoethnography</em> provides a deeply comprehensive and deftly concise analysis of autoethnographic methods, theories, and trends. He places autoethnography where it belongs, grounded in theory and rigorous analysis. From Sartre to Conquergood, Anzuldua to Derrida, Denzin tracks the philosophical and methodological journey of autoethnography as an interpretive, performative, poststructural, and politically transgressive methodology. This is the foundational survey text for autoethnographic inquiry belonging under the arm of students and accomplished scholars alike walking into a qualitative methods classroom.
- Tami Spry,