Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

thinking narrative (on the Vancouver Island ferry)

View through CrossRef
This is a hybrid poem, a grafting together of narrative research, qualitative methods, and poetic representation. “The offspring of genetically dissimilar parents” (www.answers.com), the poem attempts to exist in the rarely seen intergeneric worlds of poetry and inquiry. It is inspired in part by the poetic inquiry found in Qualitative Inquiry by poets and researchers such as Corinne Glesne, Ivan Brady, Donald Blumenfeld-Jones, Miles Richardson, Mary Weems, and others. This poem is dedicated to Dr. Antoinette Oberg, Department of Curriculum & Instruction, Faculty of Education, University of Victoria, a wondrous mentor who retired in December 2005.
Title: thinking narrative (on the Vancouver Island ferry)
Description:
This is a hybrid poem, a grafting together of narrative research, qualitative methods, and poetic representation.
“The offspring of genetically dissimilar parents” (www.
answers.
com), the poem attempts to exist in the rarely seen intergeneric worlds of poetry and inquiry.
It is inspired in part by the poetic inquiry found in Qualitative Inquiry by poets and researchers such as Corinne Glesne, Ivan Brady, Donald Blumenfeld-Jones, Miles Richardson, Mary Weems, and others.
This poem is dedicated to Dr.
Antoinette Oberg, Department of Curriculum & Instruction, Faculty of Education, University of Victoria, a wondrous mentor who retired in December 2005.

Related Results

Between Suspicion and Censure: Attitudes towards the Jewish Left in Postwar Vancouver
Between Suspicion and Censure: Attitudes towards the Jewish Left in Postwar Vancouver
This article examines relations between the Vancouver Peretz Institute (VPI, a secular, Yiddish-based organization), the United Jewish People’s Order (UJPO, a political group with ...
The Island Traffic to the Construction of Marine Society on the Sight of Media
The Island Traffic to the Construction of Marine Society on the Sight of Media
From the perspective of media, this paper aims to study how Island traffic constructs a modern marine society. Using the research paradigm of social definition, the paper investiga...
Vancouver Chinatown in Transition
Vancouver Chinatown in Transition
AbstractMuch has been written about Chinatowns in North America as a self-sustained community with fairly complete social institutions. Chinatowns emerged under an era of racism an...
LITTLE BUILDERS: CORAL INSECTS, MISSIONARY CULTURE, AND THE VICTORIAN CHILD
LITTLE BUILDERS: CORAL INSECTS, MISSIONARY CULTURE, AND THE VICTORIAN CHILD
In his Preface to R. M. Ballantyne's most famous novel, J. M. Barrie writes that “[t]o be born is to be wrecked on an island,” and so the British boy “wonder[s] how other flotsam a...
Slow Fire: Serial Thinking and Hardy's Genres of Induction
Slow Fire: Serial Thinking and Hardy's Genres of Induction
This essay considers the use of “serial thinking”—an approach to representation and cognition that emphasizes repetition, enumeration, and aggregation—in the work of Thomas Hardy. ...
The Creative Dimension of Lay Thinking in the Case of the Representation of Democracy for Greek Youth
The Creative Dimension of Lay Thinking in the Case of the Representation of Democracy for Greek Youth
This article intends to make a contribution to the study of lay thinking on democracy and proposes a theoretical framework based on the notion of the `argumentative pole' that I ha...
Theatrical Activism in Vancouver: From the Native Brotherhood and Sisterhood of BC to Marie Clements’s The Road Forward and Back …
Theatrical Activism in Vancouver: From the Native Brotherhood and Sisterhood of BC to Marie Clements’s The Road Forward and Back …
Analyzing the phenomenological performance modes balanced in Marie Clements’s production of The Road Forward during the 2013 Vancouver PuSh festival, I also examine the previous it...
(William T. Stearn Prize 2009) “The mighty cassowary”: the discovery and demise of the King Island emu
(William T. Stearn Prize 2009) “The mighty cassowary”: the discovery and demise of the King Island emu
Nicolas Baudin's 1800–1804 voyage was the only scientific expedition to collect specimens of the dwarf emu (Dromaius ater) endemic to King Island, Bass Strait, Australia. The exped...

Back to Top