Interviewing II
Four Volume Set
Edited by:
- Nigel G Fielding - University of Surrey, UK
December 2008 | 1 664 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Interviewing has a strong claim to be the most widely-practiced social science research methods. The ubiquity of this basic activity means that this field has one of the most developed bodies of methodological literature having ramifications throughout the social sciences. Nigel Fielding, the acknowledged expert in the field, has again collected a set of contemporary classic readings. Interviewing has been established as the authoritative and balanced research resource in this subject. It is comprehensive and generic; however, its coverage does not entirely reflect the apportionment of intellectual effort and interest in the field. Interviewing II delves further into the subject and concentrates on articles representing topics that have proven controversial and thus attracted many contributions.
VOLUME I
Part I. Interview History and Epistemology
The History of the Interview in Social Research
1. The History of the Interview
Jennifer Platt
2. The Meaning of Opinion
David Riesman and Nathan Glazer
Epistemology: The Concept of an ‘Interview Society’
3. Kundera’s Immortality: The Interview Society and the Invention of the Self
Paul Atkinson and David Silverman
4. The Active Interview
James A. Holstein and Jaber F. Gubrium
Epistemology: Perspectives on the Interview
5. The Nondirective Method as a Technique for Social Research
Carl R. Rogers
6. Interviewing Women: A Contradiction in Terms
Ann Oakley
7. Interview Talk: Bringing off a Research Instrument
David Silverman
Part II. COMPARING, CONTRASTING, AND INTEGRATING TYPES AND MODES
8. Toward a Sociology of Social Scientific Knowledge: Survey Research and Ethnomethodology’s Asymmetric Alternates
Douglas W. Maynard and Nora Cate Schaeffer
9. Set Them Free: Improving Data Quality by Broadening the Interviewer’s Tasks
Giampietro Gobo
10. Theory-Driven Interviewing: From Theory into Practice
Niall Hamilton-Smith and Matt Hopkins
New Types of Research Interviews
Postmodern Interviewing
11. Interview Shocks and Shockwaves
Roberta G. Sands and Michal Krumer-Nevo
Online Interviewing
12. Using the Online Medium for Discursive Research about People with Disabilities
Natilene Bowker and Keith Tuffin
13. E-Mail Interviewing in Qualitative Research: A Methodological Discussion
Lokman I. Meho
14. Conducting On-Line Focus Groups: A Methodological Discussion
Ted J. Gaiser
Definitive Treatments of Established Interview Types and Modes
Survey Interviews
15. Understanding the Question-Answer Process
Norman M. Bradburn
16. Perspectives on Pretesting: “Cognition” In the Cognitive Interview?
Eleanor R. Gerber and Tracy R. Wellens
17. Informal Testing as a Means of Questionnaire Development
Dawn D. Nelson
18. Anatomy of the Survey Interview
Wendy Sykes and Martin Collins
19. Methods of Behavior Coding of Survey Interviews
Yfke P. Ongena and Wil Dijkstra
VOLUME II
Part II. COMPARING, CONTRASTING, AND INTEGRATING TYPES AND MODES (Continued )
Focus Groups
20. Why Things (Sometimes) Go Wrong in Focus Groups
David L. Morgan
21. Using Focus Groups with Lower Socioeconomic Status Latina Women
Esther I. Madriz
22. An Evaluation of the Group Interview
Margaret Chandler
23. Interruptions in Group Discussions: The Effects of Gender and Group Composition
Lynn Smith-Lovin and Charles Brody
24. Displaying Opinions: Topics and Disagreement in Focus Groups
Greg Myers
Life History Interviews
25. Introduction: The Afterlife of the Life History
Margaret B. Blackman
26. The Life Story Approach: A Continental View
Daniel Bertaux and Martin Kohli
27. The Life History Calendar: A Technique for Collecting Retrospective Data
Deborah Freedman, Arland Thornton, Donald Camburn, Duane Alwin and Linda Young-DeMarco
CATI and CAPI
28. Research Opportunities Related to CATI
Howard E. Freeman
29. Questionnaire Design with Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing
Carol C. House
30. The Use of CAPI for Attitude Surveys: An Experimental Comparison with Traditional Methods
Jean Martin, Colm O’Muircheartaigh and John Curtice
Comparing Interview Modes
31. A Comparison of Three Mixed-Mode Interviewing Procedures in the National Crime Survey
Henry F. Woltman, Anthony G. Turner and John M. Bushery
32. Interview Mode Effects in Surveys of Drug and Alcohol Use: A Field Experiment
William S. Aquilino
Part III. DESIGNING INTERVIEW-BASED RESEARCH
Access and Refusal
33. Survey Introductions and Data Quality
Mick P. Couper
Keeping Track: Recording and Representing Interview Encounters
Recording
34. Interviewing with Tape Recorders
Joseph C. Bevis
35. Recording Technologies and the Interview in Sociology, 1920–2000
Raymond M. Lee
36. From Ethics to Analytics: Aspects of Participants’ Orientations to the Presence and Relevance of Recording Devices
Susan A. Speer and Ian Hutchby
37. ‘Analytics’ Are No Substitute for Methodology: A Response to Speer and Hutchby
Martyn Hammersley
Transcription
38. Transcription in Research and Practice: From Standardization of Technique to Interpretive Positionings
Judith C. Lapadat and Anne C. Lindsay
39. Transcription Quality as an Aspect of Rigor in Qualitative Research
Blake D. Poland
40. Working with Traumatic Stories: From Transcriber to Witness
Kim Etherington
Designing Questions and Constructing Instruments
Question Wording
41. Hardly Ever or Constantly? Group Comparisons Using Vague Quantifiers
Nora Cate Schaeffer
42. Creating Happy People by Asking Yes–No Questions
Hanneke Houtkoop-Steenstra and Charles Antaki
VOLUME III
Part III. DESIGNING INTERVIEW-BASED RESEARCH (Continued )
Constructing Instruments
43. Question Threat and Response Bias
Norman M. Bradburn, Seymour Sudman, Ed Blair and Carol Stocking
44. The Use of Respondent and Interviewer Debriefing Studies as a Way to Study Response Error in Survey Data
Pamela C. Campanelli, Elizabeth A. Martin and Jennifer M. Rothgeb
45. Reducing Response Error in Surveys
Seymour Sudman
Enhancements of Interview Research Designs
46. Role-Playing in Survey Research
Howard Stanton, Kurt W. Back and Eugene Litwak
47. Card Sorting as a Technique for Survey Interviewing
Everett F. Cataldo, Richard M. Johnson, Lyman A. Kellstedt and Lester W. Milbrath
48. The Use of Vignettes in Survey Research
Cheryl S. Alexander and Henry Jay Becker
49. The Effect of Incentives on Response Rates in Interviewer- Mediated Surveys
Eleanor Singer, John Van Hoewyk, Nancy Gebler, Trivellore Raghunathan and Katherine McGonagle
Part IV. CONDUCTING INTERVIEWS
Interview Technique: Probing, Self-Disclosure and Joint Interviews
50. Suggestive Interviewer Behaviour in Surveys: An Experimental Study
Johannes H. Smit, Wil Dijkstra and Johannes van der Zouwen
51. The In-Depth Testing of Survey Questions: A Critical Appraisal of Methods
William Foddy
52. Trying Similarity, Doing Difference: The Role of Interviewer Self- Disclosure in Interview Talk with Young People
Jackie Abell, Abigail Locke, Susan Condor, Stephen Gibson and Clifford Stevenson
53. A Note on Interviewing Spouses Together
Graham Allan
Co-Producing Interview Data and Working with Rapport
54. The Sociology of the Interview
David Riesman and Mark Benney
55. The Interviewee and the Research Interview: Analysing a Neglected Dimension in Research
Harry H. Hiller and Linda DiLuzio
56. Interviewers, Elites, and Academic Freedom
David Riesman
V. FIELD RELATIONS
Sensitive Topics
57. The Study of Sensitive Subjects
Julia Brannen
58. Asking Sensitive Questions: The Impact of Data Collection Mode, Question Format, and Question Context
Roger Tourangeau and Tom W. Smith
59. Conversational Space and Participant Shame in Interviewing
Erica Owens
Power, Gender and Interviewer/Participant Relations
60. The Interactive Construction of Narrative Styles in Sensitive Interviews: The Case of Domestic Violence Research
Guy Enosh and Eli Buchbinder
61. The Importance of Researcher’s Gender in the In-Depth Interview: Evidence from Two Case Studies of Male Nurses
Christine L. Williams and E. Joel Heikes
62. Dominance through Interviews and Dialogues
Steinar Kvale
VOLUME IV
Part VI. INTERVIEWERS: CHARACTERISTICS, QUALITIES, EFFECTS
63. Interviewers’ Verbal Idiosyncrasies as a Source of Bias
W. Andrew Collins
64. Gender Effects among Telephone Interviewers in a Survey of Economic Attitudes
Robert M. Groves and Nancy H. Fultz
65. Age and Authority in the Interview
June Sachar Ehrlich and David Riesman
66. Evaluating Race-of-Interviewer Effects in a National Survey
Nora Cate Schaeffer
67. The Effects of the Ethnicity of the Interviewer on Conversation: A Study of Chicana Women
Yvonne Tixier y Vigil and Nan Elsasser
Part VII. INTERVIEWEES
Interviewing Special Respondents: The Vulnerable
68. Interviewing Children about Their Families: A Note on Data Quality
Paul R. Amato and Gay Ochiltree
69. The Meanings of Research: Kids as Subjects and Kids as Inquirers
Jan Nespor
70. Carrying Out Surveys among the Elderly: Some Problems of Sampling and Interviewing
Gerald Hoinville
71. When in Doubt, Say Yes: Acquiescence in Interviews with Mentally Retarded Persons
Carol K. Sigelman, Edward C. Budd, Cynthia L. Spanhel and Carol J. Schoenrock
Interviewing Special Respondents: Elites
72. Interviewing a Legal Elite: The Wall Street Lawyer
Erwin O. Smigel
Part VIII. ANALYSING INTERVIEW DATA
Handling Context, Subjectivity, Perspective and Scope
73. One from the Gallery: An Experiment in the Interpretation of an Interview
David Riesman and Nathan Glazer
74. One from the Gallery: An Experiment in the Interpretation of an Interview (Conclusion)
David Riesman and Nathan Glazer
75. Stories, Background Knowledge and Themes: Problems in the Analysis of Life History Narrative
Michael Agar
Contemporary Articulations of Interview Analysis: The Accounts Perspective
76. Moral Tales: Parents’ Stories of Encounters with the Health Professions
Geoffrey Baruch
77. The Art (Fulness) of Open-Ended Interviewing: Some Considerations on Analysing Interviews
Timothy John Rapley
Contemporary Articulations of Interview Analysis: New Feminist Perspectives
78. ‘Emotion Work’ as a Participant Resource: A Feminist Analysis of Young Women’s Talk-in-Interaction
Hannah Frith and Celia Kitzinger
Contemporary Articulations of Interview Analysis: Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis
79. Close Encounters of the ‘CA’ Kind: A Review of Literature Analysing Talk in Research Interviews
Kathryn Roulston
Contemporary Articulations of Interview Analysis: The Reflexive Interview and Performativities
80. The Reflexive Interview and a Performative Social Science
Norman K. Denzin
Part IX. DOES IT DO WHAT IT SAYS ON THE LABEL? THE UTILITY OF INTERVIEW RESEARCH
Bias and Cross-Cultural Interviewing
81. Methodological Problems in Cross-Cultural Research: A Korean Immigrant Study in the United States
Won Moo Hurh and Kwang Chung Kim
82. Working between Languages and Cultures: Issues of Representation, Voice, and Authority Intensified
Rachelle Hole
Integrating and Validating Interview-Based Research
83. Recent Methodological Studies on Survey Questioning
N. J. Molenaar
84. Integrating Focus Groups and Surveys: Examples from Environmental Risk Studies
William H. Desvousges and James H. Frey
85. Fertility, Family Planning and the Social Organization of Family Life: Some Methodological Issues
Aaron V. Cicourel
86. The Quality of Qualitative Health Research: The Open-Ended Interview and Its Alternatives
David Silverman