In this article the author recounts and reflects upon methodological issues raised in research about class representations and symbolic boundary drawing in face-to-face interview encounters. Although explicit class categories are avoided among the interviewees, particularly for self-identification, processes of moral judgments, revealed in statements about ‘others’, underlines distinctions that are about class. The article discusses different aspects of accessing class by way of interviews (thereby privileging ‘talk’ as a source of data), the dilemmas involved in conducting the interviews (including the need for paying attention to classed power inherent in the research setting), and the challenges and associated problems of representing th...
In-depth interviews are a versatile form of qualitative data collection used by researchers across t...
Increasingly, researchers are conducting studies within a diversity of cultural contexts This paper ...
Acts of counter-subjectification in qualitative research are always present but are often submerged ...
In this article I recount and reflect on methodological issues raised in my research about class rep...
In qualitative interviews, challenges such as deviations from the topic, interruptions, silences or ...
In this article we argue that despite methodological and analytical advancements in the field of soc...
In this article we demonstrate how upper-middle-class respondents in Norway and the UK draw strong s...
In this article, we address the methodological question of making sense of contradictions in sociolo...
In this article, we address the methodological question of making sense of contradictions in sociolo...
This article will deal with the different power relationships that are in play during the interview ...
The article argues that interactions in qualitative interviews and ethnography can be analyzed as re...
This article explores the complex relationship between researcher and respondent through shared expe...
This encyclopaedia entry describes the characteristics of the method given in the title
The current thesis explores conditions for participation in interview interaction. Drawing on the et...
Interview has become a popular method of data collection in qualitative research. This article exami...
In-depth interviews are a versatile form of qualitative data collection used by researchers across t...
Increasingly, researchers are conducting studies within a diversity of cultural contexts This paper ...
Acts of counter-subjectification in qualitative research are always present but are often submerged ...
In this article I recount and reflect on methodological issues raised in my research about class rep...
In qualitative interviews, challenges such as deviations from the topic, interruptions, silences or ...
In this article we argue that despite methodological and analytical advancements in the field of soc...
In this article we demonstrate how upper-middle-class respondents in Norway and the UK draw strong s...
In this article, we address the methodological question of making sense of contradictions in sociolo...
In this article, we address the methodological question of making sense of contradictions in sociolo...
This article will deal with the different power relationships that are in play during the interview ...
The article argues that interactions in qualitative interviews and ethnography can be analyzed as re...
This article explores the complex relationship between researcher and respondent through shared expe...
This encyclopaedia entry describes the characteristics of the method given in the title
The current thesis explores conditions for participation in interview interaction. Drawing on the et...
Interview has become a popular method of data collection in qualitative research. This article exami...
In-depth interviews are a versatile form of qualitative data collection used by researchers across t...
Increasingly, researchers are conducting studies within a diversity of cultural contexts This paper ...
Acts of counter-subjectification in qualitative research are always present but are often submerged ...