This article challenges the hegemonic status of “language” as the primary substance of qualitative research in psychology, whether through interviews or recordings of naturally occurring talk. It thereby questions the overt focus on analyzing linguistic “meaning.” Instead, it is suggested that researchers should start paying attention to the material world (consisting of both human bodies and material objects) and what it means for how people live their lives. It is argued that this can be done by incorporating the concept of material presence to capture embodied and material layers of existence, and the method of participant observation is suggested as a viable approach to achieve this end. An empirical example of how authority is produced...
The human science or qualitative approaches to research have always argued that methodology must be ...
Interest in qualitative research in psychology has never been stronger, but although qualitative res...
It is the task of psychologists to describe and explain psychological phenomena, though the meaning ...
There has been increasing awareness and interest in the role of the senses in qualitative research. ...
We live and we think inside a world of things made and found. Still, psychological science has shown...
This article argues that subjective processes, social relations, and artifacts (including research i...
In this article, we examine participants\u27 talk about qualitative research. We provide empirical s...
The present paper addresses several aspects discussed in the special issue on the future of qualitat...
The future of qualitative methods regards the kind of object cultural psychology is interested and t...
The article discusses the ethnographic approaches to the study of material culture and the place th...
According to the Critical Theory (Frankfurt School), things deeply influence the processes of human ...
The paper argues 1. that methodologies of qualitative research in psychology and the social sciences...
This open access book analyzes language education through a socio-material framework. The authors re...
Traditionally, psychology as a discipline relies heavily on quantitative data. In fact, it can be ar...
Abstract: The paper argues 1. that methodologies of qualitative research in psychology and the so-ci...
The human science or qualitative approaches to research have always argued that methodology must be ...
Interest in qualitative research in psychology has never been stronger, but although qualitative res...
It is the task of psychologists to describe and explain psychological phenomena, though the meaning ...
There has been increasing awareness and interest in the role of the senses in qualitative research. ...
We live and we think inside a world of things made and found. Still, psychological science has shown...
This article argues that subjective processes, social relations, and artifacts (including research i...
In this article, we examine participants\u27 talk about qualitative research. We provide empirical s...
The present paper addresses several aspects discussed in the special issue on the future of qualitat...
The future of qualitative methods regards the kind of object cultural psychology is interested and t...
The article discusses the ethnographic approaches to the study of material culture and the place th...
According to the Critical Theory (Frankfurt School), things deeply influence the processes of human ...
The paper argues 1. that methodologies of qualitative research in psychology and the social sciences...
This open access book analyzes language education through a socio-material framework. The authors re...
Traditionally, psychology as a discipline relies heavily on quantitative data. In fact, it can be ar...
Abstract: The paper argues 1. that methodologies of qualitative research in psychology and the so-ci...
The human science or qualitative approaches to research have always argued that methodology must be ...
Interest in qualitative research in psychology has never been stronger, but although qualitative res...
It is the task of psychologists to describe and explain psychological phenomena, though the meaning ...