TY - JOUR
T1 - Hidden present, visible absent in the city of dreams
T2 - Assembling the collective imagination
AU - Rhodes, Paul
AU - Mihalits, Dominik
AU - Lättmann, Katrin
AU - Rodax, Natalie
AU - Hornung, Severin
AU - Chistensen, Anne Bryde
AU - Degen, Johanna
AU - Schüttengruber, Victoria
AU - Tchitchihé, Martine
AU - Haq, Shifa
AU - Nebowsky, Anna-Eva
AU - Pern, Tuuli
AU - Schraube, Ernst
AU - Botelho, Veronica
N1 - This article has been found as a ’Free Version’ from the Publisher on February 5, 2019. When access to the article closes, please notify rucforsk@ruc.dk
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - This paper serves as a collaborative auto-ethnography of psychological researchers, engaged in a unique encounter with each other and with the streets, artefacts, history and ghosts of Vienna, the City of Dreams. This small international and interdisciplinary group engaged in four pre-planned exercises in this city, each geared towards developing the sensitivity of researchers to notions of embodied introspection. Participants were asked to recollect and diarise their internal dialogue and these voices were assembled according to the practice of bricolage. This paper aims to demonstrate how new forms of knowledge might be created, based on the material experience of place, and the assembling of the collective imagination of researchers. It also aims to demonstrate how this collective imagination might be written about in novel ways, with a decentred author capturing the atmosphere while it lasts.
AB - This paper serves as a collaborative auto-ethnography of psychological researchers, engaged in a unique encounter with each other and with the streets, artefacts, history and ghosts of Vienna, the City of Dreams. This small international and interdisciplinary group engaged in four pre-planned exercises in this city, each geared towards developing the sensitivity of researchers to notions of embodied introspection. Participants were asked to recollect and diarise their internal dialogue and these voices were assembled according to the practice of bricolage. This paper aims to demonstrate how new forms of knowledge might be created, based on the material experience of place, and the assembling of the collective imagination of researchers. It also aims to demonstrate how this collective imagination might be written about in novel ways, with a decentred author capturing the atmosphere while it lasts.
UR - https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs42087-018-0020-z
U2 - 10.1007/s42087-018-0020-z
DO - 10.1007/s42087-018-0020-z
M3 - Journal article
VL - 1
SP - 151
EP - 165
JO - Human Arenas - An interdisciplinary Journal of Psychology, Culture, and Meaning
JF - Human Arenas - An interdisciplinary Journal of Psychology, Culture, and Meaning
SN - 2522-5790
IS - 2
ER -