Seale (sociology, Brunel University) presents a comprehensive examination of contemporary and traditional varieties of qualitative research practices, for advanced students and researchers in any discipline. Qualitative researchers in the social sciences demonstrate the benefits of using particular methods from the perspective of real- life experience, reflecting current work in North American, British, European, and Australian traditions of qualitative research practice. Material is in sections on encountering method, analytic frameworks, field relations, context and method, quality and credibility, audiences and applications, and the international context. Chapters deal with specific aspects such as conversation analysis, working in hostile environments, and participant observation. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com) `This comprehensive collection of almost 40 chapters - each written by a leading expert in the field - is the essential reference for anyone undertaking or studying qualitative research. It covers a diversity of methods and a variety of perspectives and is a very practical and informative guide for newcomers and experienced researchers alike - John Scott, University of Essex `The best ways in which to understand the issues and processes informing qualitative research is to learn from the accounts of its leading practitioners. Here they come together in what is a distinctive and wide-ranging collection that will appeal to postgraduates and social researchers in general - Tim May, University of Salford `This excellent guide engages in a dialogue with a wide range of expert qualitative researchers, each of whom considers their own practice in an illuminating and challenging way. Overall, the book constitutes an authoritative survey of current methods of qualitative research data collection and analysis - Nigel Gilbert, University of Surrey Learning to do good qualitative research occurs most fortuitously by seeing what researchers actually do in particular projects and by incorporating their procedures and strategies into ones own research practice. This is one of the most powerful and pragmatic ways of bringing to bear the range of qualitative methodological perspectives available. The chapters in this important new volume are written by leading, internationally distinguished qualitative researchers who recount and reflect on their own research experiences as well as others, past and present, from whom they have learned. It demonstrates the benefits of using particular methods from the viewpoint of real-life experience. From the outside, good research seems to be produced through practitioners learning and following standard theoretical, empirical and procedural formats. But from the inside we learn that qualitative research (like other forms of scientific endeavour) is also a biographical engagement, rendering its scholarly and practical contributions in its own terms. Standards take on practical meaning as the distinct activities of qualitative research resonate throughout the enterprise, complicating its accountability to itself and to others. In an authoritative yet accessible manner, Qualitative Research Practice reveals the special features of this engagement, teaching us that qualitative research is as much a craft and practice as it is a way of knowing. Presenting a comprehensive examination of contemporary and traditional varieties of qualitative research practice, Qualitative Research Practice will be an invaluable resource for advanced students and researchers in any discipline. It is an essential and definitive guide to the major forms of qualitative methods in use today, written by leaders in the relevant fields of research practice.
Introduction - Clive Seale, Giampietro Gobo, Jaber Gubrium and David Silverman |
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Inside Qualitative Research |
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PART ONE: ENCOUNTERING METHOD |
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Interviews - Tim Rapley |
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Oral History - Joanna Bornat |
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Biographical Research - Gabriele Rosenthal |
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Focus Groups - Phil Macnaghten and Greg Myers |
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Grounded Theory - Ian Dey |
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Performance and Rehearsal - Paul Atkinson |
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The Ethnographer at the Opera |
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PART TWO: ANALYTIC FRAMEWORKS |
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Narrative Research - Molly Andrews, Shelley Day Sclater, Corinne Squire and Maria Tamboukou |
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Feminist Approaches - Celia Kitzinger |
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The Foucaultian Framework - Gavin Kendall and Gary Wickham |
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Ethnomethodology - Paul ten Have |
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Conversation Analysis - Anssi Perakyla |
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Discourse Analytic Practice - Alexa Hepburn and Jonathan Potter |
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Critical Discourse Analysis - Ruth Wodak |
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PART THREE: FIELD RELATIONS |
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Ethnography and Participant Observation - Sara Delamont |
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Ethical Issues - Anne Ryen |
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Working in Hostile Environments - Nigel Fielding |
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Politics, Research and Understanding - Les Back |
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Collaborative and Team Research - Linda S Mitteness and Judith C Barker |
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PART FOUR: CONTEXT AND METHOD |
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Context - James Holstein and Jaber Gubrium |
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Working it Up, Down and Across |
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Working Qualitatively and Quantitatively - Julia Brannen |
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Secondary Analysis of Archived Data - Louise Corti and Paul Thompson |
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Reanalysis of Previously Collected Material - Malin Akerstr[ um]om, Katarina Jacobsson and David W[ um]asterfors |
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The Internet as Research Context - Annette Markham |
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Documents - Lindsay Prior |
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Visual Methods - Sarah Pink |
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PART FIVE: QUALITY AND CREDIBILITY |
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Quality in Qualitative Research - Clive Seale |
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Five Misunderstandings about Case Study Research - Bent Flyvbjerg |
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Sampling, Representativeness and Generalizability - Giampietro Gobo |
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Working with `Key Incidents' - Bob Emerson |
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Computer Assisted Qualitative Data Analysis - Udo Kelle |
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PART SIX: AUDIENCES AND APPLICATIONS |
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Preparing and Evaluating Qualitative Research Proposals - Janice Morse |
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Qualitative Market Research - Gill Ereaut |
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Qualitative Evaluation Research - Moira Kelly |
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Action Research - Donna Ladkin |
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Teaching Qualitative Method - Martyn Hammersley |
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Writing a Social Science Monograph - Barbara Czarniawska |
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Publishing Qualitative Manuscripts - Donileen Loseke and Spencer Cahill |
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PART SEVEN: THE INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT |
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The Globalization of Qualitative Research - Pertti Alasuutari |
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Clive Seale has been Professor of Sociology (or Medical Sociology) at Goldsmiths and Queen Marys (both University of London) and Brunel University. His work has concerned communication in health care and death in modern society. He has published extensively on research methods. His books include Constructing Death: the sociology of dying and bereavement (Cambridge University Press, 1998), The Quality of Qualitative Research (Sage, 1999), Media and Health (Sage, 2003) and Gender and the Language of Illness (Palgrave-Macmillan, 2010, with Jonathan Charteris-Black). Recently, he has turned to fiction, publishing a novel, Interrogating Ellie (Cloiff Books, 2015) using the pen name Julian Gray. He is currently writing another novel. Giampietro Gobo is Professor of Methodology of Social Research and Sociology of Science at the University of Milan (Italy). He was one of the founders of the Qualitative Methods Research Network of the European Sociological Association.
His interests concern scientific controversies on health issues and workplace studies. He is currently undertaking projects on immunization and COVID-19 policies, and ethnographic experiments in the area of cooperation in small teamwork. His books include Doing Ethnography (Sage, 2008), Qualitative Research Practice (co-edited with C. Seale, J. F. Gubrium and D. Silverman, Sage, 2004) and Constructing Survey Data: An Interactional Approach (with S. Mauceri, Sage, 2014). Jaber F. Gubrium is professor and chair of sociology at the University of Missouri. He has an extensive record of research on the social organization of care in human service institutions. His publications include numerous books and articles on aging, family, the life course, medicalization, and representational practice in therapeutic context. David Silverman trained as a sociologist at the London School of Economics and the University of California, Los Angeles. He taught for 32 years at Goldsmiths, University of London, where he is now Emeritus Professor in the Sociology Department as well as Visiting Professor in the Business Schools, Kings College, London, Leeds University and University of Technology Sydney and Adjunct Professor, Faculty of Education, Queensland University of Technology. He is interested in conversation and discourse analysis and he has researched medical consultations, shelters for homeless people and HIV-test counselling.
He is the author of Doing Qualitative Research (sixth edition, 2022) and A Very Short, Fairly Interesting, Reasonably Cheap Book about Qualitative Research (second edition, 2013c). He is the editor of Qualitative Research (fifth edition, 2021) and the Sage series Introducing Qualitative Methods. In recent years, he has offered short, hands-on workshops in qualitative research for universities in Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia.
Now retired from full-time work, he aims to watch 100 days of county cricket a year. He also enjoys spending time with his grandchildren and great-grandsons as well as voluntary work in an old peoples home where he chats and sings with residents.