Writing and Righting Trauma: Troubling the Autoethnographic Voice
Abstract
How do we speak meaningfully and ethically about loss and trauma? This piece grapples with the use of traumatic experiences as the basis of autoethnographic scholarship. It mulls over the impact of telling our messy, unreasonable stories in a tidy, reasonable voice, and the consequences of becoming participant-observers in our own lives. Our testimonial practices are bound by discursive norms that limit our ability to tell performative stories which produce both knowledge and empathy. The scholarly authorial voice insulates us from the experiences we purport to describe and limits the impact of our work. This piece asks how we might write ourselves differently.
URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0901220
URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0901220
Keywords
trauma; autoethnography; representation; ethics; testimony; research


