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<title>General</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/10453/321" rel="alternate"/>
<subtitle/>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/10453/321</id>
<updated>2013-05-26T09:16:24Z</updated>
<dc:date>2013-05-26T09:16:24Z</dc:date>
<entry>
<title>Towards an auto-ethnography of an occupational therapist's published body of work</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/10453/1583" rel="alternate"/>
<author>
<name>Denshire Sally-Anne</name>
</author>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/10453/1583</id>
<updated>2010-07-07T07:31:45Z</updated>
<published>2006-01-01T00:00:00Z</published>
<summary type="text">Towards an auto-ethnography of an occupational therapist's published body of work
Denshire Sally-Anne

My inquiry into writing concerns the place of arts-based inquiry in the occupational therapy&#13;
profession and ways in which auto-ethnography can potentially contribute to a critical&#13;
reading of an occupational therapist’s published body of work. I am using writing as a&#13;
method of inquiry, re-reading my publications written over two decades&#13;
as occupational therapist at a metropolitan children’s hospital and, more recently, a regional&#13;
university. My new writing intends to be fictive and poetic, problematising those&#13;
institutional ways of knowing (and writing) that I have taken for granted. The&#13;
autobiographical story boards are entitled “Always a writer”, “Being a therapist” and&#13;
“Becoming academic”. The new corpus will be a collection of untold stories from an autoethnographic&#13;
inquiry into my published body of work. My hope is that these untold stories&#13;
may recover a counter-historical imagination for occupational therapy, opening space for&#13;
more reflexive, ethical practice.
</summary>
<dc:date>2006-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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