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-List Of Titles -Negotiating intercultural academic careers : a narrative analysis of two senior university lecturers

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/156241

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Title
Negotiating intercultural academic careers : a narrative analysis of two senior university lecturers
Related
Trahar, Sheila. Learning and teaching narrative inquiry : travelling in the Borderlands, p.157-172
Related
Studies in narrative Vol. 14
Publisher
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company
Date
2011
Author/Creator
Hellstén, Meeri
Author/Creator
Goldstein-Kyaga, Katrin
Description
Research into the influences on academic work of professional life stories and contextual adaptability is gaining ground. There is an increase in the use of 'self-study' as a method for explaining the diverse work demands in the academic profession. This chapter reports on two such stories narrated by university lecturers. The aim is to illuminate and discuss academic and professional pathways to current professional situations by way of two senior university lecturers' conversations. The academics grew up and pursued their educational and professional careers in different social, cultural, linguistic, economic and political contexts, but are currently working at the same university. In their stories we explore how and in what ways their different contexts have influenced them as professional university teachers and researchers. By so doing, we use these stories to interpret the world or worlds in and through which the two have interacted on their way to academia and thus view their stories as social products constructed in the context of specific social, historical and cultural locations. Stories are here viewed as sources of 'coming to know' through which the two represent themselves and their worlds as well as construct personal identities as professionals. In the stories we link the past to the present as the two give meaning to their lives as these have been negotiated academically and professionally. Though stories speak for themselves they require interpretation when used as data in social research. Our model of narrative analysis is more of thematic analysis that places emphasis on the content of the story as a text. With identity construction as professionals we do also have a performative view dealing with how narrators want to be known, and precisely how they i nvolve the audience in 'doing' their identities. Through the two narratives presented in the chapter, we make links to how they can be utilized pedagogically to enable the accomplishment of new learning in the intercultural higher education context.
Description
16 page(s)
Resource Type
book chapter
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Education

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/156241
Identifier
ISBN:9789027226549
Identifier
mq_res-ext-201111031125
Language
eng
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Learning and teaching narrative inquiry : travelling in the Borderlands"
 
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