Abstract
‘We do not lack communication. On the contrary, we have too much of it. We lack creation. We lack resistance to the present’, writes Gilles Deleuze (1994, p. 108). This is an assertion that runs counter to dominant discourses about academic writing, yet I will argue here that writing is a critical form of resistance to important aspects of the present, including the injunction to communicate in ways codified by the academy. Method, I aim to show, refers not only to the process of research but also to the process of making sense of that research in and through a writing that does not come afterward as a ‘writing up’ of what has previously been discovered, but is actually continuous with it, and, in large part, produces it. Writing in the Humanities, and increasingly in the Social Sciences, does not comprise an aftereffect of research, but forms its very fabric. Writing is not a transparent medium, nor something that comes somehow after the event , a simple ‘outcome’ of research that always takes place elsewhere, in the archive, in the field or the focus group, on the Web, but is a mode of inquiry in its own right.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Affective Methodologies: Developing Cultural Research Strategies for the Study of Affect |
Editors | Britta Timm Knudsen, Carsten Stage |
Place of Publication | U.K. |
Publisher | Palgrave |
Pages | 222-236 |
Number of pages | 15 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781137483195 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781137483188 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2015 |
Keywords
- affect (psychology)
- communication
- methodology
- writing