Offers a comprehensive framework for analyzing the construction and use of stories in society. This centers on the interplay of narrative work and narrative environments, viewed as reflexively related. Topics dealing with narrative work include activation, linkage, composition, performance, collaboration, and control. Those dealing with narrative environments include close relationships, local culture, status, jobs, organizations, and intertextuality. Both the texts and everyday contexts of the storying process are considered, with accompanying guidelines for analysis and illustrations from empirical material. Methodological procedures feature interviewing, ethnographic fieldwork, and conversational and textual analysis. The conclusion raises the issue of narrative adequacy, addressing the questions of what is a good story and who is a good storyteller.

Interviewing at the Border of Fact and Fiction

Paul C.Rosenblatt

For many social scientists there is still a distinct boundary between fact and fiction in interviewing. For them, interviewing is a matter of finding the best ways to elicit true, valid, factual answers to interview questions. However, for ever more of us, the boundary between fact and fiction has blurred (Denzin ...

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