1st Edition

Qualitative Inquiry, Cartography, and the Promise of Material Change

By Aaron M. Kuntz Copyright 2019
    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    What are the problems to which materialist methodologies are posed as a solution? In this book, Aaron M. Kuntz maps the impact of materialism on contemporary practices of inquiry in education and the social sciences. Through this work, the author challenges readers to consider inquiry as a mode of ethically engaged citizenship with implications for resisting our contemporary moment towards a more equitable future.

    The author engages his own inquiry as radical cartographic work, drawing forth distinctions between dialectical and dialogic formations of materialism in order to develop what he terms relational materialism—an engaged orientation to living that dwells in the entangled relations of affirmative ethics and enduring practices of resistance and refusal. Drawing upon examples from higher education, contemporary culture, and normative assumptions of governance, the author considers the potential that we might generate living alternatives to the contemporary status quo; daily practices no longer dependent on binary division or standardized calculations of what "matters." As such, the author advocates for practices of virtuous inquiry (future-orientated ethical assertions of what one should do) that orient inquiry as materially ethical activity.

    Despite the often-overwhelming state of inequity and exploitation in our contemporary world, Kuntz generates an affirmative ethical stance that we can become relationally different, guided by a virtuous determination to articulate inquiry as the cartographic work of disruption and imagination. This text will prove valuable to graduate students and faculty who take inquiry seriously and seek the means to understand their work as engaged in the necessary challenge for material change.

    Acknowledgements

    Chapter 1. Introduction

    Chapter 2. Being/Becoming Material

    Chapter 3. Knowledge & Class: Coming to Process

    Chapter 4. Truth-Telling, Inquiry, & Affirmative Ethics

    Chapter 5. Relational Inquiry as Radical Cartography

    Chapter 6. Higher Education and the Governance of Things

    Chapter 7. Refusal & Resistance

    References

    Biography

    Aaron M. Kuntz is Professor of Educational Studies at the University of Alabama where he teaches graduate courses in qualitative inquiry and foundations of education. His research focuses on developing materialist methodologies – ways of producing knowledge that take seriously the theoretical deliberations of critical theory, relational materialism, and poststructuralism.