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Tamara: Journal for Critical Organization Inquiry

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Year 2016 
Volume 14 
Issue 1

Examining Scholarly Identity Through Auto-Fiction: A Court Jester’s Tale

Denise McDonald
University of Houston - Clear Lake

2016 14 (1) Tamara: Journal for Critical Organization Inquiry

Abstract

This auto-fictitious narrative is an existential and political exploration of scholarly identity transformation of a teacher educator in academia. Set within a parallel, metaphorical kingdom, identity is examined through the author’s actions, interactions and experiences with others in a fictional setting. Narratives, in storytelling formats, establish agency of self and provide “voice” to be freely expressed, most notably for those who experience marginalization where their thoughts and ideas have been mitigated within traditional institutional environments and dialogues. Expressed in a humorous, somewhat deliberately mischievous manner, the polyphonic self in this story reflects on relational power and academic identity within the university environment. This descriptive piece adds discussion to existing organizational research through presentation of a fictional piece for examining how one may self-construct identity within a hegemonic work setting.

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APA style

McDonald, Denise (2016). Examining Scholarly Identity Through Auto-Fiction: A Court Jester’s Tale. (2016). Examining Scholarly Identity Through Auto-Fiction: A Court Jester’s Tale. Tamara: Journal For Critical Organization Inquiry, 14(1), 1-20. (Original work published 2016)

MLA style

McDonald, Denise. “Examining Scholarly Identity Through Auto-Fiction: A Court Jester’S Tale”. 2016. Tamara: Journal For Critical Organization Inquiry, vol. 14, no. 1, 2016, pp. 1-20.

Chicago style

McDonald, Denise. “Examining Scholarly Identity Through Auto-Fiction: A Court Jester’S Tale”. Tamara: Journal For Critical Organization Inquiry, Tamara: Journal for Critical Organization Inquiry, 14, no. 1 (2016): 1-20.