Recent years have seen psychoanalysis move out of the clinical area into the arena of empirical social research. This article uses a case study from a psychoanalytically informed media research project to explore conceptual, ethical, and methodological implications in research design in the light of this shift. The ideas of unconscious communication between interviewer and interviewee, the role of the researcher's subjectivity, and the impact of unconscious defences on the generation and interpretation of data are explored. In addition the free association narrative interviewing (FANI) method is evaluated
Failure, guilt, confession, redemption? Revisiting unpublished research through a psychosocial lens...
Based on life-story interviews with psychoanalytic psychotherapists, this article demonstrates the v...
This paper explores the relation between transference and free association in the production of data...
This case study will demonstrate how psychoanalysis can enable the sociological researcher to reveal...
This article takes the stance that the subjectivity of the researcher is an integral part of the res...
This article discusses the use of psychoanalysis – particularly of psychoanalytic technique based on...
This article reflects on pivotal concepts of psychoanalytic practice and theory, applied to a single...
This thesis enquires into the application of concepts and practices associated with psychoanalysis (...
In this paper I provide a theoretical outline, followed by two case examples, of a qualitative metho...
This article is about how to preserve the vitality of the meaning conveyed to social science researc...
Background Free association is a core concept of the free association narrative interview method, an...
This article contributes to the geographical literature on reflexivity by asking what it means to ta...
Research procedures can create emotional distance between researchers and participants, thereby rend...
This short commentary outlines psychoanalysis as a theory and method and its potential value to medi...
Hollway and Jefferson’s free association narrative interview method is an approach to qualitative r...
Failure, guilt, confession, redemption? Revisiting unpublished research through a psychosocial lens...
Based on life-story interviews with psychoanalytic psychotherapists, this article demonstrates the v...
This paper explores the relation between transference and free association in the production of data...
This case study will demonstrate how psychoanalysis can enable the sociological researcher to reveal...
This article takes the stance that the subjectivity of the researcher is an integral part of the res...
This article discusses the use of psychoanalysis – particularly of psychoanalytic technique based on...
This article reflects on pivotal concepts of psychoanalytic practice and theory, applied to a single...
This thesis enquires into the application of concepts and practices associated with psychoanalysis (...
In this paper I provide a theoretical outline, followed by two case examples, of a qualitative metho...
This article is about how to preserve the vitality of the meaning conveyed to social science researc...
Background Free association is a core concept of the free association narrative interview method, an...
This article contributes to the geographical literature on reflexivity by asking what it means to ta...
Research procedures can create emotional distance between researchers and participants, thereby rend...
This short commentary outlines psychoanalysis as a theory and method and its potential value to medi...
Hollway and Jefferson’s free association narrative interview method is an approach to qualitative r...
Failure, guilt, confession, redemption? Revisiting unpublished research through a psychosocial lens...
Based on life-story interviews with psychoanalytic psychotherapists, this article demonstrates the v...
This paper explores the relation between transference and free association in the production of data...