HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
In response to these calls, the authors show how reflecting on the more uncomfortable or challenging aspects of research practice provides rich insight into the complexities of research on/as work and into conducting ethnographic and autoethnographic research in settings and sectors that might be construed as "dirty" (Grandy et_al, 2015; Simpson et_al, 2016), particularly due to their close connections to workers` and researchers` bodies. In recent years, there has been a burgeoning interest in the body and its role in meaning making in work and organization studies, prompting a range of innovations and . . .
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