
The New Language of Qualitative Method
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 3. July 1997
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-0-19-509994-2 (ISBN)
Description
In recent years, scholars and researchers have moved away from quantitative methods of research and toward qualitative methods, which emphasize questions of meaning and interpretation. Gubrium and Holstein offer a new theoretical view which reintegrates the traditional emphasis on the "how" and "what" of social life with a contemporary understanding of the "why". The authors demonstrate how their approach may be put into practice in research on family, aging,
deviance and social problems, and organizations and institutions.
deviance and social problems, and organizations and institutions.
Reviews / Votes
Gubrium and Holstein have done us a service in revisiting and updating hte ontological and epistemological assumptions of varieties of qualitative research...will be valuable for postgraduate courses in the philosophy of social research and qualitative methods. A book which attempts to bring qualitative methods into contemporary debates about epistemology is to be recommended, and it offers considerable material to enable the reader to evaluate their own form ofqualitative research practice. - Barbara Harrison. Sociology. Vol 32. 1998.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 154 mm
Thickness: 13 mm
Weight
383 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-509994-2 (9780195099942)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Author
Professor of SociologyUniversity of Florida
Professor of SociologyMarquette University
Content
Introduction 1.: Method Talk -- Varieties of Method Talk; Common Threads; Leading Questions Part I: Idioms of Qualitative Inquiry 2.: Naturalism -- "Being There"; "Their Worlds"; "Their Own Stories"; A Tradition of Guidelines 3.: Ethnomethodology -- The Roots of Ethnomethodology; Bracketing Social Realities; Etnomethodological Description; The Talk of How 4.: Emotionalism -- The Tone of Emotionalist Talk; A Field of Emotion; Creative Interviewing; The Emotional Fieldworker; Reenacting Emotionality 5.: Postmodernism -- Expressions of Postmodernism; Studying Cinematic Society; Psychoanalytic Reading; Confronting the Crisis of Representation; Postmodernistic Representation Part II: Renewing the Language: 6.: Analytic Choices -- Where Do We Go From Home?; At the Lived Border of Reality and Representation; Enduring Risks; What Are the Options?; Choosing an Analytic Vocabulary; Analyzing Interpretive Practice; 7.: The "Artful" Side of Interpretive Practice -- Conversational Structure and Interactional Competencies; Constitutive Description; Narrative Practice; 8.: Condition of Interpretation -- Goffman as a Point of Departure; Contingencies of Circumstance; Interpretive Resources; Local Culture; Institutional Sites/Sights of Local Culture; The Comparative Ethnography of Interpretive Practice; 9.: Explanation and Deprivatization -- Emerging Explanatory Footings; Deprivatization and Interpretation; Diversity and Deprivatization; Reflexively Reasserting the Common Threads