List of Illustrations Chapter 1. On the difficulties of writing about culture in autoethnography Phiona Stanley & Greg Vass Chapter 2. "Help me": The English language and a voice from a Korean Australian living in Singapore Hyejeong Ahn Chapter 3. Personal instructions on how to remain a stranger to enforce a sociological perspective Silvia B¿rd Calva Chapter 4. Writing flows: The self as fragmentary whole David Bright Chapter 5. Searching for ¿my¿ Mexico: An autoethnographic account of unlearning and relearning about the limits of knowing the Other Alice Cranney Chapter 6. Negotiating the v¿: The ¿self¿ in relation to others and navigating the multiple spaces as a New Zealand-raised Tongan male David Fa¿avae Chapter 7. Scene, seen, unseen Fetaui Iosefo Chapter 8.
How do ¿we¿ know what ¿they¿ need? Learning together through duoethnography and English language teaching to immigrant and refugee women Ulrike Najar & Julie Choi Chapter 9. Performing problematic privilege in Japan Gabrielle Piggin Chapter 10. Nuanced "culture shock": Local and global "mate" culture Robert E. Rinehart Chapter 11. In which I am sung to, cry, and other suchlike: Reflections on research in and with Tibetan refugees in India Harmony Siganporia Chapter 12. Walking to heal or walking to heel? Contesting cultural narratives about fat women who hike and camp alone Phiona Stanley Chapter 13. Reading Shiva Naipaul: A reflection on Brownness and leading an experiential learning project in Malawi C. Darius Stonebanks Chapter 14.
Untangling me: Complexifying cultural identity Gresilda A. Tilley-Lubbs Chapter 15. Whose story is it anyway? Reflecting on a collaborative research project with/in an educational community Greg Vass, Michelle Bishop, Katherine Thompson, Pauline Beller, Calita Murray, Jane Tovey & Maxine Ryan Chapter 16. Six tales of a visit to Chile: An autoethnographic reflection on ¿questions of culture¿ Esther Fitzpatrick Acknowledgements About the authors Index.