Kaleidoscope Notes: Writing Women's Music and Organizational Culture

Striving to express the lived experience of women's music at The Club, Stacy Holman Jones has created a text that is itself performative, and the reader cannot resist playing a starring role. Her evocative narrative slips in and out of prose, dialogue, and poetry. Fieldnotes and song lyrics are staged as inseparable parts of the events of social meaning occurring between ethnographer and field site, between reader and text. Jones is haunted by the specters of reliability and validity, motivated by the goals of multivocality and multiple truths, and driven by the music. She is also driven by the mystery and complexity of women's music; a category which is impossible to capture, tame, or pin down. Created and recreated from many points of view in each performance and evocation, it resists a stable definition. This innovative ethnography is an important move toward turning the postmodern critique into a lyrical and complex expression of social experience.

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Kaleidoscope Notes: Writing Women's Music and Organizational Culture

Striving to express the lived experience of women's music at The Club, Stacy Holman Jones has created a text that is itself performative, and the reader cannot resist playing a starring role. Her evocative narrative slips in and out of prose, dialogue, and poetry. Fieldnotes and song lyrics are staged as inseparable parts of the events of social meaning occurring between ethnographer and field site, between reader and text. Jones is haunted by the specters of reliability and validity, motivated by the goals of multivocality and multiple truths, and driven by the music. She is also driven by the mystery and complexity of women's music; a category which is impossible to capture, tame, or pin down. Created and recreated from many points of view in each performance and evocation, it resists a stable definition. This innovative ethnography is an important move toward turning the postmodern critique into a lyrical and complex expression of social experience.

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Kaleidoscope Notes: Writing Women's Music and Organizational Culture

Kaleidoscope Notes: Writing Women's Music and Organizational Culture

by Stacy Holman Jones
Kaleidoscope Notes: Writing Women's Music and Organizational Culture

Kaleidoscope Notes: Writing Women's Music and Organizational Culture

by Stacy Holman Jones

Hardcover

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Overview

Striving to express the lived experience of women's music at The Club, Stacy Holman Jones has created a text that is itself performative, and the reader cannot resist playing a starring role. Her evocative narrative slips in and out of prose, dialogue, and poetry. Fieldnotes and song lyrics are staged as inseparable parts of the events of social meaning occurring between ethnographer and field site, between reader and text. Jones is haunted by the specters of reliability and validity, motivated by the goals of multivocality and multiple truths, and driven by the music. She is also driven by the mystery and complexity of women's music; a category which is impossible to capture, tame, or pin down. Created and recreated from many points of view in each performance and evocation, it resists a stable definition. This innovative ethnography is an important move toward turning the postmodern critique into a lyrical and complex expression of social experience.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780761989653
Publisher: AltaMira Press
Publication date: 04/02/1998
Series: Ethnographic Alternatives Series , #3
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.28(w) x 9.28(h) x 0.72(d)

About the Author

Stacy Holman Jones is assistant professor in the department of communication at the University fo South Florida.

Table of Contents

chapter 1 1. Mother's Music chapter 2 2. Ain't I a Woman? chapter 3 3. Both chapter 4 4. Engineering the Feminine chapter 5 5. How Could Anyone? chapter 6 6. Little Notes chapter 7 7. Refrain, Not Finale chapter 8 Bibliography

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