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Writing Qualitatively, or the Demands of WritingDepartment of Secondary Education at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada. Have you ever said this or heard someone say this: "I have done all of my data analysis I just have to write it down." Or, "I just have to write it up"? I will suggest that within the context of phenomenological inquiry, it is not necessarily helpful to try to assist researchers learning "how to write down" their reflections or "how to write up" their results. What should be more helpful is learning "how to write." Qualitative writing may be seen as an active struggle for understanding and recognition of the lived meanings of the lifeworld, and this writing also possesses passive and receptive rhetoric dimensions. It requires that we be attentive to other voices, to subtle significations in the way that things and others speak to us. In part, this is achieved through contact with the words of others. These words need to touch us, guide us, stir us.
Key Words: space of writing phenomenological method phenomenological reflection gaze of Orpheus desire hypomnesis anamnesis primal impressional consciousness
Qualitative Health Research, Vol. 16, No. 5,
713-722 (2006) This article has been cited by other articles:
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