Drawing on participant-generated photo-elicitation in telephone interviews conducted with private tenants in Britain, we contribute to a new strand of home literature that engages with the vibrant materiality of things. In particular, the paper reflects on how our innovative methodological approach empowered participants to introduce their own points of view through ‘thick’ descriptions, revealed previously undocumented home practices and enabled researchers’ reflexivity and the co-production of knowledge with participants located miles away. The method powerfully captures home’s tangible and intangible materialities and their importance to wellbeing in ways that words-alone interviews cannot. We conclude by introducing the metaphor of ‘the...
This paper discusses photo-elicitation as a method of data generation in hospitality and tourism res...
The subjects that are examined within my works are the physical materials\ud that make up a home, th...
In the field of architecture, there has been little research on how the accumulation of material pos...
Drawing on participant-generated photo-elicitation in telephone interviews conducted with private te...
Drawing on participant-generated photo-elicitation in telephone interviews conducted with private te...
This article explores the possibilities of using innovative, interdisciplinary methods for understan...
Drawing on assemblage-thinking and specific assemblage concepts, this article explores the ways in w...
This introductory study explores the meanings and images of ‘home’ for a student living in student a...
This article proposes and demonstrates an approach to understanding everyday life that takes as its ...
How can we depict the intimacy of homes as personal and private spaces as well as expressing the pub...
Background Quality of life has improved dramatically over the last 200 years but this has also broug...
This article reports on an attempt to use photo-elicitation to explore contested intergenerational p...
Homes are often the site of research in business anthropology. The relatively brief time frames of m...
Photovoice is a Participatory Action Research (PAR) method that generates knowledge about the lived ...
In this paper, we describe a research methodology we have developed, based upon digital ethnography ...
This paper discusses photo-elicitation as a method of data generation in hospitality and tourism res...
The subjects that are examined within my works are the physical materials\ud that make up a home, th...
In the field of architecture, there has been little research on how the accumulation of material pos...
Drawing on participant-generated photo-elicitation in telephone interviews conducted with private te...
Drawing on participant-generated photo-elicitation in telephone interviews conducted with private te...
This article explores the possibilities of using innovative, interdisciplinary methods for understan...
Drawing on assemblage-thinking and specific assemblage concepts, this article explores the ways in w...
This introductory study explores the meanings and images of ‘home’ for a student living in student a...
This article proposes and demonstrates an approach to understanding everyday life that takes as its ...
How can we depict the intimacy of homes as personal and private spaces as well as expressing the pub...
Background Quality of life has improved dramatically over the last 200 years but this has also broug...
This article reports on an attempt to use photo-elicitation to explore contested intergenerational p...
Homes are often the site of research in business anthropology. The relatively brief time frames of m...
Photovoice is a Participatory Action Research (PAR) method that generates knowledge about the lived ...
In this paper, we describe a research methodology we have developed, based upon digital ethnography ...
This paper discusses photo-elicitation as a method of data generation in hospitality and tourism res...
The subjects that are examined within my works are the physical materials\ud that make up a home, th...
In the field of architecture, there has been little research on how the accumulation of material pos...