Research approaches in the field of transpersonal psychology can be
transformative for researchers, participants, and the audience of a
project. This book offers these transformative approaches to those
conducting research across the human sciences and the humanities.
Rosemarie Anderson and William Braud first described such methods in
Transpersonal Research Methods for the Social Sciences (1998). Since
that time, in hundreds of empirical studies, these methods have been
tested and integrated with qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-method
research designs. Anderson and Braud, writing with a contribution from
Jennifer Clements, invite scholars to bring multiple ways of knowing and
personal resources to their scholarship. While emphasizing established
research conventions for rigor, Anderson and Braud encourage researchers
to plumb the depths of intuition, imagination, play, mindfulness,
compassion, creativity, and embodied writing as research skills.
Experiential exercises to help readers develop these skills are
provided.