ABSTRACT

Contemporary developments in posthumanist theory offer significant challenges and opportunities for scholars interested in producing autoethnographic work. This chapter examines the consequences of the posthumanist turn toward nonhuman, materialist, and Indigenous philosophies for autoethnography at the level of the self, the social, and the task of writing. In each section, established tenets of autoethnography are subjected to posthumanist revision, and potential future areas of research are articulated.