Instances or Sequences? Improving the State of the Art of Qualitative Research

Numbers apparently talk. With few numbers, qualitative researchers appear to rely on examples or instances to support their analysis. Hence research reports routinely display data extracts which serve as telling instances of some claimed phenomenon. However, the use of such an evidential base rightl...

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Main Author: David Silverman
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: FQS 2005-09-01
Series:Forum: Qualitative Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/6
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spelling doaj-1add3cc654954b08bbbfb026dea855352020-11-24T23:23:08ZdeuFQS Forum: Qualitative Social Research1438-56272005-09-01635Instances or Sequences? Improving the State of the Art of Qualitative ResearchDavid Silverman0King’s College LondonNumbers apparently talk. With few numbers, qualitative researchers appear to rely on examples or instances to support their analysis. Hence research reports routinely display data extracts which serve as telling instances of some claimed phenomenon. However, the use of such an evidential base rightly provokes the charge of (possible) anecdotalism, i.e. choosing just those extracts which support your argument. I suggest that this methodological problem is best addressed by returning to those features of our theoretical roots which tend to distinguish what we do from the work of quantitative social scientists. Although SAUSSURE is most cited in linguistics and structural anthropology, he provides a simple rule that applies to us all. In a rebuke to our reli­ance on instances, SAUSSURE tells us "no mean­ing exists in a single item". Everything depends upon how single items (elements) are articulated. One everyday activity in which the social world is articulated is through the construction of se­quences. Just as participants attend to the se­quential placing of interactional "events", so should social scientists. Using examples drawn from focus groups, fieldnotes and audiotapes, I argue that the identification of such sequences rather than the citing of instances should constitute a prime test for the adequacy of any claim about qualitative data. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0503301http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/6methodologyethnographyfocus groupslanguageconversation analysis
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Silverman
spellingShingle David Silverman
Instances or Sequences? Improving the State of the Art of Qualitative Research
Forum: Qualitative Social Research
methodology
ethnography
focus groups
language
conversation analysis
author_facet David Silverman
author_sort David Silverman
title Instances or Sequences? Improving the State of the Art of Qualitative Research
title_short Instances or Sequences? Improving the State of the Art of Qualitative Research
title_full Instances or Sequences? Improving the State of the Art of Qualitative Research
title_fullStr Instances or Sequences? Improving the State of the Art of Qualitative Research
title_full_unstemmed Instances or Sequences? Improving the State of the Art of Qualitative Research
title_sort instances or sequences? improving the state of the art of qualitative research
publisher FQS
series Forum: Qualitative Social Research
issn 1438-5627
publishDate 2005-09-01
description Numbers apparently talk. With few numbers, qualitative researchers appear to rely on examples or instances to support their analysis. Hence research reports routinely display data extracts which serve as telling instances of some claimed phenomenon. However, the use of such an evidential base rightly provokes the charge of (possible) anecdotalism, i.e. choosing just those extracts which support your argument. I suggest that this methodological problem is best addressed by returning to those features of our theoretical roots which tend to distinguish what we do from the work of quantitative social scientists. Although SAUSSURE is most cited in linguistics and structural anthropology, he provides a simple rule that applies to us all. In a rebuke to our reli­ance on instances, SAUSSURE tells us "no mean­ing exists in a single item". Everything depends upon how single items (elements) are articulated. One everyday activity in which the social world is articulated is through the construction of se­quences. Just as participants attend to the se­quential placing of interactional "events", so should social scientists. Using examples drawn from focus groups, fieldnotes and audiotapes, I argue that the identification of such sequences rather than the citing of instances should constitute a prime test for the adequacy of any claim about qualitative data. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0503301
topic methodology
ethnography
focus groups
language
conversation analysis
url http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/6
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