eprintid: 10110050
rev_number: 14
eprint_status: archive
userid: 608
dir: disk0/10/11/00/50
datestamp: 2020-09-16 13:20:58
lastmod: 2020-09-16 13:20:58
status_changed: 2020-09-16 13:20:58
type: article
metadata_visibility: show
creators_name: Latham, A
creators_name: Wagner, LB
title: Experiments in becoming: corporeality, attunement and doing research
ispublished: pub
divisions: UCL
divisions: A01
divisions: B03
divisions: C03
divisions: F26
keywords: Becoming, duration, embodied learning, ethnography, experimentation, qualitative methods, temporality, thresholds
note: This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
abstract: Human geography has become deeply interested in a range of research methods that focus on researchers’ corporeal engagement with their research sites. This interest has opened up an exciting set of research horizons, energising the discipline in a whole range of ways. Welcoming this engagement, this paper presents a series of meditations on the process of using the researcher’s corporeal learning as a research tool. Exploring two research projects, as well as the work of the photographer Nikki S Lee, it examines how the process of becoming corporeally capable might productively be framed as sets of ongoing experiments. Framing such engagements as experiments is a useful heuristic through which to think rigorously about what such research can claim as knowledge. More controversially, the paper argues that the heuristic of the experiment helps us to attend to the varying durations of becoming in ways that much existing work has discounted. Developing corporeal capacities – gaining a skill, becoming capable of doing a particular activity – involves becoming attuned to a range of thresholds, the crossing of which open up novel and frequently unexpected perspectives. Attunement to these thresholds does not arise simply through the process of mixing in and participating in a research site. It requires careful attention to the parameters of transformation involved in being able to participate. The paper explores how such parameters might be decided upon and calibrated as part of an ongoing engagement with a research site or event. Our aim is not to artificially restrict or constrain how human geographers approach their research design. Rather it is to encourage human geographers to show more courage in their use of corporeal based research methodologies.
date: 2020-09-01
date_type: published
official_url: https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474020949550
oa_status: green
full_text_type: pub
language: eng
primo: open
primo_central: open_green
verified: verified_manual
elements_id: 1812917
doi: 10.1177/1474474020949550
lyricists_name: Latham, Alan
lyricists_id: ARLAT03
actors_name: Kalinowski, Damian
actors_id: DKALI47
actors_role: owner
full_text_status: public
publication: Cultural Geographies
citation:        Latham, A;    Wagner, LB;      (2020)    Experiments in becoming: corporeality, attunement and doing research.                   Cultural Geographies        10.1177/1474474020949550 <https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474020949550>.       Green open access   
 
document_url: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10110050/1/Latham_Experiments%20in%20becoming-%20corporeality%2C%20attunement%20and%20doing%20research_AOP.pdf