A returned Peace Corps volunteer examines whether he established an increased cross-cultural awareness while living in Surname for two years. Employing emotional recall, the presenter analyzed personal journals kept during the experience. He discusses the explored interactions of his physical/temporal reality and “enacted” reality to provide examples. A primary conclusion is that power structures and personal perceptions influence cultural experiences and its perceived meaning
This thesis explores the potential of Autoethnography in researching and representing social and cu...
This article describes insights and consciousness transformations reported in several contemporary p...
Autoethnography is an increasingly popular form of postpositivist narrative inquiry that has recentl...
A returned Peace Corps volunteer examines whether he established an increased cross-cultural awarene...
In the form of an autoethnography, a returned Peace Corps volunteer examines how, when, and if, he w...
The autoethnography-based dissertation, Adaptation and Beyond: From Isolation and Separation Toward ...
Paternalism is a subject par excellence for such an autoethnographic analysis because ‘authors use t...
This study examines how experiences with art promote healthy cultural identities of self and others,...
Autoethnography allows researchers to make sense of the ‘ethno’ – the cultural – by studying their o...
This work serves as a case study to extend, expand, and challenge the conventionally anthropocentric...
This qualitative hermeneutic study grew out of a desire to evaluate the effects of cross-cultural im...
An attempt to provide an alternative set of procedures for cross-cultural training aims at imparting...
Knowing oneself has been an age-old humanistic concern for many western and oriental philosophers. T...
This paper presents an autoethnographic reflection of one graduate student’s experience while intern...
An autoethnography of a Chinese American who shares four narratives of intercultural conflict intera...
This thesis explores the potential of Autoethnography in researching and representing social and cu...
This article describes insights and consciousness transformations reported in several contemporary p...
Autoethnography is an increasingly popular form of postpositivist narrative inquiry that has recentl...
A returned Peace Corps volunteer examines whether he established an increased cross-cultural awarene...
In the form of an autoethnography, a returned Peace Corps volunteer examines how, when, and if, he w...
The autoethnography-based dissertation, Adaptation and Beyond: From Isolation and Separation Toward ...
Paternalism is a subject par excellence for such an autoethnographic analysis because ‘authors use t...
This study examines how experiences with art promote healthy cultural identities of self and others,...
Autoethnography allows researchers to make sense of the ‘ethno’ – the cultural – by studying their o...
This work serves as a case study to extend, expand, and challenge the conventionally anthropocentric...
This qualitative hermeneutic study grew out of a desire to evaluate the effects of cross-cultural im...
An attempt to provide an alternative set of procedures for cross-cultural training aims at imparting...
Knowing oneself has been an age-old humanistic concern for many western and oriental philosophers. T...
This paper presents an autoethnographic reflection of one graduate student’s experience while intern...
An autoethnography of a Chinese American who shares four narratives of intercultural conflict intera...
This thesis explores the potential of Autoethnography in researching and representing social and cu...
This article describes insights and consciousness transformations reported in several contemporary p...
Autoethnography is an increasingly popular form of postpositivist narrative inquiry that has recentl...