This paper reflects on experiences of researching family resemblances, a quirky research theme which can feel both familiar and elusive. What can we learn by researching things, such as resemblances, that blur the boundaries between tangibility and intangibility? Mason argues that in/tangibles can often play an important part in everyday life and that we need to take a creative, inquisitive and truly inter/extra-disciplinary approach to researching them
In this talk I will be discussing some of my recent fieldwork, which has sought to explore the relat...
Drawing on participant-generated photo-elicitation in telephone interviews conducted with private te...
The centrality of the researcher and their position in relation to the research setting has been sub...
Findings from Living Resemblances project, part of Real Life Methods. See Official URL link for more...
Drawing on the 2008 Mass Observation Directive 'Doing Family Research', this article explores the ro...
This article uses the examples of the `kinship consequences'of assisted conception, the contemporary...
The rapidly expanding discipline of interpretive inquiry, especially in its narrative analysis form,...
The notion of family resemblance has recently emerged as a promising and fruitful approach to charac...
People often acquire souvenirs and photographs to facilitate remembering, but possessions and memori...
The term qualitative research still gives meaning to a diverse array of approaches. Attr...
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to consider value as individual and experiential, based on the r...
Some people positively like the idea that they resemble someone in their family. Others enjoy spotti...
This paper examines jewelry as a tangible form of memories. People carry memories of their lost love...
Our daily interactions with objects can not only leave traces of use on the objects but also leave m...
Our daily interactions with objects can not only leave traces of use on the objects but also leave m...
In this talk I will be discussing some of my recent fieldwork, which has sought to explore the relat...
Drawing on participant-generated photo-elicitation in telephone interviews conducted with private te...
The centrality of the researcher and their position in relation to the research setting has been sub...
Findings from Living Resemblances project, part of Real Life Methods. See Official URL link for more...
Drawing on the 2008 Mass Observation Directive 'Doing Family Research', this article explores the ro...
This article uses the examples of the `kinship consequences'of assisted conception, the contemporary...
The rapidly expanding discipline of interpretive inquiry, especially in its narrative analysis form,...
The notion of family resemblance has recently emerged as a promising and fruitful approach to charac...
People often acquire souvenirs and photographs to facilitate remembering, but possessions and memori...
The term qualitative research still gives meaning to a diverse array of approaches. Attr...
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to consider value as individual and experiential, based on the r...
Some people positively like the idea that they resemble someone in their family. Others enjoy spotti...
This paper examines jewelry as a tangible form of memories. People carry memories of their lost love...
Our daily interactions with objects can not only leave traces of use on the objects but also leave m...
Our daily interactions with objects can not only leave traces of use on the objects but also leave m...
In this talk I will be discussing some of my recent fieldwork, which has sought to explore the relat...
Drawing on participant-generated photo-elicitation in telephone interviews conducted with private te...
The centrality of the researcher and their position in relation to the research setting has been sub...