Dreaming in Arará: An Empirical Nightmare

Authors

  • JT Torres Washington State University (Department of Educational Leadership, Sports Studies, and Educational/Counseling Psychology)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1913-5874/37396

Abstract

The following essay employs creative nonfiction to explore the space of dreams as an opportunity to flesh out cross-cultural understandings of art’s capacity or limits to materialize new ways of relating in the world. Treating dreams as data disrupts the normative notion of what counts as experience. By drawing on Joan Scott and Elizabeth Adams St. Pierre, I argue for more transgressive approaches to relating in the world, made possible through artistic inquiries into the imaginable, irruptive act of dreaming. Blended with my argument is a creative nonfiction essay of my fieldwork in Cuba, in which dreams are treated as an epistemic process and, therefore, a means to which I, as a researcher, can also come to know myself and my relation in the world.

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Published

2016-11-01

How to Cite

Torres, J. (2016). Dreaming in Arará: An Empirical Nightmare. InTensions, (8). https://doi.org/10.25071/1913-5874/37396