Mahnaz Alimardanian
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Ontology and its double
On the nature of ambiguity and lived experience
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This chapter is a theoretical reflection on the nature of ambiguity and lived experience. By bridging across phenomenological and existential modes of study and social analysis in the Manchester School, the chapter employs a holistic approach to the concept of experience and explores its interrelation with knowledge in fine details. Inspired by Turner’s (1985, 1987) work on the study of performance and experience, the chapter theorises the study of lived experience and ordinary pragmatism. Through the two-way cycle of knowledge-experience, the chapter illustrates the dynamism of knowledge and experience, certainty and uncertainty, and ontology and what the authors refer to as non-ontology as necessity of life and day-to-day being. The chapter argues that ambiguity is the essential force and source of these dynamics. Through flashbacks to previously conducted ethnographies and ethnographic contexts, the author discusses the analytical value of ambiguity and negative forms of engagement in humanistic and social analysis.

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