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“Unlearning to not speak”

Human Studies 13 (2):147 - 161 (1990)

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  1. Flow: Beyond fluidity and rigidity. [REVIEW]Charlotte Bloch - 2000 - Human Studies 23 (1):43-61.
    The term flow refers to a particular type of experience characterized by feelings of fusion with an on-going activity, effortlessness and fluidity. This article concerns the results of an empirical investigation and phenomenological analysis of this type of experience. The analysis yields a distinction between three phenomenological structures, identified as arising in different combinations within concrete experiences of flow. These results are discussed in relation to the theories of Alfred Schutz and Erving Goffman regarding the organization of experience in everyday (...)
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  • Appreciating phenomenology and feminism: Researching quiltmaking and communication. [REVIEW]Kristin M. Langellier - 1994 - Human Studies 17 (1):65 - 80.
    The effort to “appreciate” phenomenology and feminism in the study of quiltmaking discourse self-reflexively joins a philosophy of experience with a politics of women's experiences. At the same time it reveals method to be an embodied practice which involves knowledge as power, and it discovers power relations between researchers and the researched within particular contexts and relationships. For phenomenology, these reflections may encourage closer attention to the en-gendering and situating of the subject within social and cultural conditions. Also they may (...)
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