Biographical Research Methods
Biographical Research Methods
Biographical Research Methods
John King
No social study that does not come back to the problems of biography, of history, and of their interactions within a society, has completed its intellectual journey. C. Wright Mills
Definitions
Life story
The account given by an individual about his or her life
Life history
A personal account triangulated with external sources
Narrative approach
Recognises that an individuals personal account is a tightly edited account for an intended audience
Life histories
The life history may be the best available technique for studying such important social psychological processes as adult socialization, the emergence of group and organizational structure, the rise and decline of social relationships, and the situational response of the self to daily interactional contingencies.
Denzin 1970: 257
Life stories
A life story does not consist of an atomistic chain of experiences, whose meaning is created at the moment of their articulation, but is rather a process taking place simultaneously against the backdrop of a biographical structure of meaning, which determines the selection of the individual episodes presented, and within the context of the interaction with a listener.
Rosenthal (1993:63)
Extensively employed by Robert Park and colleagues at the Chicago School in the study of city life during the early C20 Fell out of favour during the late 1930s and 1940s as positivist methods gained favour Began to revive from the 1960s Narrative turn in social studies through the 1990s
Areas of study in which life history has made a substantive contribution (Plummer 1985)
Subjective reality of the individual Process, ambiguity and change in everyday life
The life history, more than any other technique except perhaps participant observation, can give meaning to the overworked notion of process (Becker 1970: 116)
Classic study
Thomas & Znaniecki ([1918-20]1958) The Polish Peasant in Europe and America
Sought to show that the problems of the immigrant community were due to the transition from a very different society The authors believed that the life-record could be used to explain the appearance of new individual attitudes and new social values by looking at the interplay of existing attitudes and values
Issues
Do not permit hypothesis testing (Becker 1970) Offers insights but not reliable generalisations Fails to conform to scientific standards of validity (corresponds to truth) and reliability (achieves the same results each time)
Alternatives to positivistic standards of reliability, validity and generalisability (Hatch & Wisniewski 1995)
Epistemological positions
Realist position - participants can know reality and report on it Phenomenological position - participants can know their experiences and report on them Constructionist position - both participants perceptions and researchers interpretations are shaped by cultural practices
Postmodernist position - narrative conventions and the process of writing up research mean that different interpretations of the text are possible
Neo-positivist
Deductive
Narrative
Abductive / adductive
Theory tested against Aim is to understand empirical material actors unique situations Reality structured by interplay between interviewee and interviewer Authenticity is important
Actors views represent Actors views are reality interpretations of reality Saturation and reliability are important Interview effects must be controlled Validity is important
Interview situation is the Interview effects must core source of be controlled information
The intention in the study of lives is to gain an understanding of individuals life experiences within their socio-historical context (Roberts 2002) Shift from subject-object relationship to viewing the researcher as reflexive collaborator
Methodological challenges
Sampling
Opportunistic sampling Selective sampling (Schatzman and Strauss 1973)
Each narrator is chosen to represent a certain type or group considered to be important on conceptual grounds
Arranging interviews
Conducting interviews
Tell your life history or the story of your life... I will say very little, and if I ask you any questions it will be mainly about something not clear to me, if I dont understand something... take it in any order you want.
Use open-ended questions Elicit stories; probe generalizations
Concerns for ethics and closing the gap between interviewer and interviewee
Narrator control
No control
3)Co-authorship
Levels of analysis
Life history reconstruction
Factual details are clarified and temporally ordered
Fidelity
Fidelity rather than truth is the measure of these tales
Truth: what happened in a situation
Fidelity: what it means to the teller of the tale (think how difficult it is to write exactly what we mean!)
Is not ones fidelity to objects really a fidelity to others and oneself about objects? (William Earle, in Grumet)
Triangular relationship between the narrator, the narrative and its objects, and the receiver of the narrative
Narrator, narratee and the object of the narrative can agree on the quality of fidelity Grumet (1988) in Blumenfeld-Jones (1995)
context
subjectivity
Wengraf, T., 2000. Uncovering the general from within the particular. In P. Chamberlayne, J. Bornat, & T. Wengraf, eds. The turn to biographical methods in social science. Psychology Press, pp. 140164.
Pattern of Sub-interpretation WHOLE Empathy II: interpretation interpolation, The hidden basic imaginary question of the reconstruction PREUNDERUNDERtext a priori STANDING STANDING Existential understanding of situations The fusion of horizons Dialogue
PART Text
Alvesson, M. & Skldberg, K., 2009. Reflexive Methodology, SAGE Publications Limited.
Attaining believability
As a reasonable portrayal of the specific story As the story resonates with the audiences experiences
Blumenfeld Jones, D., 1995. Fidelity as a criterion for practicing and evaluating narrative inquiry. In J. A. Hatch & R. Wisniewski, eds. Life history and narrative. London: Falmer Press.
Types of presentation
Re-presentation
Not simply about reorganising the details of a story (presentation)
The narrator is bounded by his or her purposes in telling the story The researcher has intentions and is reconstructing as well
Blumenfeld Jones, D., 1995. Fidelity as a criterion for practicing and evaluating narrative inquiry. In J. A. Hatch & R. Wisniewski, eds. Life history and narrative. London: Falmer Press.
Effects of stories
Transformation of individuals by challenging the limitations of available narratives and offering new narratives Bringing together individuals and constructing new identitities
This includes the researcher and researched!