Summary
Contents
Subject index
Researchers conducting interviews in the social sciences quickly find that there is no single best way to approach their task. This text offers a critique of traditional interviewing practices and provides a framework for thinking about issues such as trustworthiness, identity, and language in a conceptual rather than technical context, allowing you to develop your own reflexive practice.
The research interview is in with the brick and mortar of qualitative research, and is one of the routine methods of obtaining knowledge of individuals, groups, and organizations. Through the use of eight original metaphors drawing on trends in language, subject, and discourse, this cutting-edge text will encourage you to question the interpretive nature and theoretical underpinnings not only of your interview method, but of the knowledge which is conveyed through it.
This text is essential reading for graduate students of qualitative methods and researchers looking to more clearly conceptualize their interviewing practice and explore its theoretical basis.
Implications for Research Practice
Implications for Research Practice
The kind of thinking suggested by understanding(s) of the research interview here proposed can be used in at least four different ways:
- Revising and improving research practice.
- Increasing the rigor and carefulness of interpretations of interviews.
- Reconsidering the kinds of research questions we can ask.
- Acknowledging the limits of rigorous empirical work and the use of empirical ...
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