ABSTRACT

Meaningful Journeys is an edited collection of autoethnographies underpinned by the conceptual, philosophical, and etymological origins of ‘journeying,’ ‘questing,’ and traditional and modern understandings of ‘pilgrimage.’

The volume contains chapters on the ways in which all these concepts intersect with identity and identity transformation. These range across narratives of sport; adventure; preferred identity; curative religion; revered location; nostalgia; grief resolution; ‘out of suitcase’ travels; and pilgrimage journeys understood in more traditional senses. The collection showcases and promotes the identity transformational quest as an important conceptual nuance of narrative autoethnography. Readers will engage with the ways in which contributing authors craft their emerging selves into preferred identities, which showcase personal and relational change in action.

This book is essential reading for students and practitioners of autoethnography and qualitative research internationally and others interested in identity transformation in narrative inquiry.

chapter 2|19 pages

Running Towards Death

A tale of an old man in trainers

chapter 3|16 pages

The Red Carpet Quest

An ironman competitor's transformational journey

chapter 5|16 pages

Solo Trails/Trials for this Unlikely Hiker

Purpose, purity, and quest

chapter 6|13 pages

The Pilgrimage to Manhood

An autoethnographic account of transition from female to male as a journey of self-discovery

chapter 7|21 pages

A Scot an' a Sassenach Scrieve aboot Leid

A three pairt Scotoethnography (A Scot and an English person write about language: A Scotoethnography in three parts) 1

chapter 8|16 pages

Curative Encounters

Representations of the transformational journey of the pilgrim to Lourdes

chapter 9|15 pages

Welsh Pilgrimage

A quest for a reaffirmed national identity and a secular journey to a spiritual locus

chapter 10|19 pages

A Journey Through Prolonged Grief

Transforming identity to heal and reconcile loss

chapter 12|19 pages

Paying Respects to the Greatest

Ziyarat in Louisville, Kentucky

chapter 13|18 pages

Pilgrimage to a Shared Site

A Buddhist scholar and Muslim scholar visit Borobudur