Using narrative in social research : qualitative and quantitative approaches / Jane Elliott.
Material type: TextPublisher: London : SAGE, 2005Description: x, 220 pISBN:- 1412900409 :
- 1412900417 (pbk.) :
- 300.72 22
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | North Campus North Campus Main Collection | 300.72 ELL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | A298408B | ||
Book | North Campus North Campus Main Collection | 300.72 ELL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | A415945B |
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1. Narrative and new developments in the social sciences -- 2. Listening to people's stories : the use of narrative in qualitative interviews -- 3. Interpreting people's stories : narrative approaches to the analysis of qualitative data -- 4. Collecting quantitative narratives - a contradiction in terms? -- 5. Statistical stories? : the use of narrative in quantitative analysis -- 6. Uncovering and understanding causal effects and processes -- 7. Narrative and identity : constructions of the subject in qualitative and quantitative research -- 8. The ethical and political implications of using narrative in research -- 9. The researcher as narrator : reflexivity in qualitative and quantitative research -- 10. Telling better stories? : combining qualitative and quantitative research -- App. Details of some major longitudinal quantitative datasets.
"This is a lucid and accessible introduction to narrative methods in social research. It is also an important book about the nature, role and theoretical basis of research methodology in general. Jane Elliott instructs the reader on the basic methods and methodological assumptions that form the basis of narrative methods. She does so in a way that is practical and accessible and in a way that will make the book a favourite with students and experienced researchers alike. Elliott argues that both qualitative and quantitative methods are characterized by a concern with narrative, and that our research data can best be analyzed if it is seen in narrative terms. In concrete, step-by-step terms she details for the reader how to go about collecting data and how to subject that data to narrative analysis, while at the same time placing this process in its wider theoretical context. She works across the traditional quantitative/qualitative divide to set out the ways in which narrative researchers can uncover such issues as social change, causality and social identity. She also shows how the techniques and skills used by qualitative researchers can be deployed when doing quantitative research and, similarly, how qualitative researchers can sometimes profit from using quantitative skills and techniques."--Publisher.
Tertiary/Undergraduate.
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