Listening to Voices: An Ethics of Entanglement
ISBN: 978-1-78052-878-6, eISBN: 978-1-78052-879-3
Publication date: 30 July 2012
Abstract
Purpose – To explore an ethics of entanglement in the context of mental health and psychosocial research.
Design/methodology/approach – To bring together debates within body and affect studies, and specifically the concepts of mediated perception and the performativity of experimentation. My specific focus will be on voice hearing and research that I have conducted with voice hearers, both within and to the margins of the Hearing Voices Network (see Blackman, 2001, 2007).
Findings – The antecedents for a performative approach to experimentation and an ethics of entanglement can be found within a nineteenth-century subliminal archive (Blackman, 2012).
Originality/value – These conceptual links allow the researcher to consider the technologies that might allow them to ‘listen to voices’ and introduce the non-human into our conceptions of listening and interpreting. This directs our attention to those agencies and actors who create the possibility of listening and learning beyond the boundaries of a humanist research subject.
Keywords
Citation
Blackman, L. (2012), "Listening to Voices: An Ethics of Entanglement", Love, K. (Ed.) Ethics in Social Research (Studies in Qualitative Methodology, Vol. 12), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 173-188. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1042-3192(2012)0000012012
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited