This article explores how anxiety, and its bodily affects, influences the experience of encounters within and around research spaces. Throughout, I offer up autoethnographic excerpts from field notes which contextualise my experience of anxiety while undertaking social geographical research. Through these vignettes, I ask: What does embodying anxiety in academic and research spaces feel like? How can we understand, conceptualise, and attach meaning to forces which influence how researchers experience anxiousness? And what opportunities for reflexive research practice and critical knowledge production might be created by attending to the bodies and embodied experiences of anxious researchers? Responding to these questions, I position anxiety...
Despite the recent 'reflexive turn' in fieldwork-based sociology, and its organisational variants, e...
There has been much work highlighting the benefits of autoethnographic research yet little acknowled...
The article identifies three main challenges in doing ethnography in illiberal settings. First, the ...
This article explores how anxiety, and its bodily affects, influences the experience of encounters w...
This article contributes to the geographical literature on reflexivity by asking what it means to ta...
Research problems are crucial in the sense that they provide new research with purpose and justifica...
This paper advances a theory of anxiety as social practice. Distinguishing between individual anxiet...
Despite advancements, there remains relatively little research about how researchers navigate their ...
Within the social sciences, there is an increasing move towards visual and creative methods of data ...
This article explores academics’ well-being through analysing published sensitive disclosures, bring...
Purpose –The purpose of this paper is to explore a researcher’s emotions in the field. It argues tha...
Despite advancements, there remains relatively little research about how researchers navigate their ...
This research discusses the anxiety experienced by Cath in Rainbow Rowell's Fangirl Novel (2013). Th...
Traditional research discourses continue to present academic work as rational, detached, objective a...
This article investigates experiences of Social Anxiety Disorder (‘social anxiety’) with reference t...
Despite the recent 'reflexive turn' in fieldwork-based sociology, and its organisational variants, e...
There has been much work highlighting the benefits of autoethnographic research yet little acknowled...
The article identifies three main challenges in doing ethnography in illiberal settings. First, the ...
This article explores how anxiety, and its bodily affects, influences the experience of encounters w...
This article contributes to the geographical literature on reflexivity by asking what it means to ta...
Research problems are crucial in the sense that they provide new research with purpose and justifica...
This paper advances a theory of anxiety as social practice. Distinguishing between individual anxiet...
Despite advancements, there remains relatively little research about how researchers navigate their ...
Within the social sciences, there is an increasing move towards visual and creative methods of data ...
This article explores academics’ well-being through analysing published sensitive disclosures, bring...
Purpose –The purpose of this paper is to explore a researcher’s emotions in the field. It argues tha...
Despite advancements, there remains relatively little research about how researchers navigate their ...
This research discusses the anxiety experienced by Cath in Rainbow Rowell's Fangirl Novel (2013). Th...
Traditional research discourses continue to present academic work as rational, detached, objective a...
This article investigates experiences of Social Anxiety Disorder (‘social anxiety’) with reference t...
Despite the recent 'reflexive turn' in fieldwork-based sociology, and its organisational variants, e...
There has been much work highlighting the benefits of autoethnographic research yet little acknowled...
The article identifies three main challenges in doing ethnography in illiberal settings. First, the ...