Carrying out research across the arts and humanities and social sciences: developing the methodology for Dementia and Imagination
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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In: Cultural Trends, Vol. 25, No. 4, 11.2016, p. 218-232.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Carrying out research across the arts and humanities and social sciences
T2 - developing the methodology for Dementia and Imagination
AU - Newman, Andrew
AU - Baber, Michael
AU - O'Brien, Dave
AU - Goulding, Anna
AU - Jones, Catrin
AU - Howson, Teri
AU - Jones, Carys
AU - Parkinson, Clive
AU - Taylor, Katherine
AU - Tischler, Victoria
AU - Windle, Gill
N1 - AHRC ESRC
PY - 2016/11
Y1 - 2016/11
N2 - This paper analyses how the methodological approach for a major Arts and Humanities Research Council and Economic and Social Research Council-funded project entitled Dementia and Imagination 11 http://dementiaandimagination.org.uk/View all notes was formulated. This multidisciplinary project brings together the arts and humanities with the social sciences with their different epistemological philosophies and subsequent understandings of research methods. The main objective was to determine how visual arts activities may change, sustain and catalyse community cultures, beliefs, attitudes and behaviours to create dementia-friendly communities. This project involves 6 different UK universities, 14 researchers, 10 formal partners, 7 project artists, 3 research artists and a large number of civil society organisations. The analysis presents a series of themes that have been identified as influencing the approach taken to develop methods which aimed to speak to different audiences in the social sciences, arts and humanities, policy/practice and public domains. It is concluded that a research project of this type needs to embrace a wide variety of epistemological positions if it is to successfully achieve its objectives. This paper contributes to knowledge about how the methodology of large-scale multidisciplinary projects may be constructed which will be of value to those building research consortia across different universities and between universities and community partners.
AB - This paper analyses how the methodological approach for a major Arts and Humanities Research Council and Economic and Social Research Council-funded project entitled Dementia and Imagination 11 http://dementiaandimagination.org.uk/View all notes was formulated. This multidisciplinary project brings together the arts and humanities with the social sciences with their different epistemological philosophies and subsequent understandings of research methods. The main objective was to determine how visual arts activities may change, sustain and catalyse community cultures, beliefs, attitudes and behaviours to create dementia-friendly communities. This project involves 6 different UK universities, 14 researchers, 10 formal partners, 7 project artists, 3 research artists and a large number of civil society organisations. The analysis presents a series of themes that have been identified as influencing the approach taken to develop methods which aimed to speak to different audiences in the social sciences, arts and humanities, policy/practice and public domains. It is concluded that a research project of this type needs to embrace a wide variety of epistemological positions if it is to successfully achieve its objectives. This paper contributes to knowledge about how the methodology of large-scale multidisciplinary projects may be constructed which will be of value to those building research consortia across different universities and between universities and community partners.
KW - Methodologies
KW - Epistemologied
KW - Dementia
KW - Visual Arts
KW - Dementia and Imagination
U2 - 10.1080/09548963.2016.1241338
DO - 10.1080/09548963.2016.1241338
M3 - Article
VL - 25
SP - 218
EP - 232
JO - Cultural Trends
JF - Cultural Trends
SN - 1469-3690
IS - 4
ER -