DISCOURSES: CONVERSATIONS, NARRATIVES AND AUTOBIOGRAPHIES AS TEXTS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sports in Society: Issues & Controversies
Advertisements

SPORTS IN SOCIETY: SOCIOLOGICAL ISSUES AND CONTROVERSIES
ORGANIZING AND PRESENTING QUALITATIVE DATA
CRITICAL PARADIGMS OF SOCIAL RESEARCH
Research Narrative Designs Dr. William M. Bauer
Narrative Research Designs
Ethnography. In ethnography, the researcher  Participates in people's daily lives for an extended period of time  Watches everyday happenings  Listens.
Chapter 15 Ethnographic Designs
DISCOURSE AND POWER Broadly speaking, inculcation is the mechanism of power-holders who wish to preserve their power, while communication is the mechanism.
EXAMING SOCIAL LIFE Social sciences are disciplines that study human social behavior or institutions and functions of human society. Social interaction.
Comparing tv news programmes A framework for analysis.
ANALYZING VISUAL MEDIA © LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION & KEITH MORRISON.
VISUAL MEDIA IN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH © LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION & KEITH MORRISON.
DISCOURSES: CONVERSATIONS, NARRATIVES AND AUTOBIOGRAPHIES AS TEXTS © LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION & KEITH MORRISON.
CHAPTER 17 Focus Groups. What is a focus group? Focus groups involve a facilitated discussion between members, focused on a topic or area specified by.
Copyright © 2008 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey All rights reserved. John W. Creswell Educational Research: Planning,
Chapter Thirteen Rhetorical and Critical Analyses: Understanding Text And Image In Words.
Valley View Secondary School The content of the Research Project comprises the:  Capabilities  Research framework.  In the Research Project students.
Narrative Research Designs
Power Point Slides by Ronald J. Shope in collaboration with John W. Creswell Chapter 15 Ethnographic Designs.
ACCOUNTS © LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION & KEITH MORRISON.
Contextual Models of Process Professor Andrew M. Pettigrew FBA Dean School of Management University of Bath Tel: +44 (0)
Critical Discourse Analysis
GCSE English Language 8700 GCSE English Literature 8702 A two year course focused on the development of skills in reading, writing and speaking and listening.
Grounded theory, discourse analysis and hermeneutics Part Two – Discourse Analysis ERPM001 Interpretive Methodologies Dr Alexandra Allan.
Stuart Hall ENCODING/DECODING MODEL OF COMMUNICATION.
Using Discourse Analysis on News Media Content
Sports in Society: Issues & Controversies
Use of Literature in Language Teaching
The Great Gatsby Re-creative Writing.
Qualitative Data Analysis
Media Studies: Key Concepts.
Types of interview used in research
PRAGMATICS 3.
DEFINITION CDA is an analytical research methodology that proposes a study of the relations between discourse, power, dominance and social inequality Accordingly,
IB Assessments CRITERION!!!.
presentation is a powerful tool
10.2 Qualitative research: Interviews
CRITICAL EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
© LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION AND KEITH MORRISON
VISUAL MEDIA IN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Narrative Research Designs
HISTORICAL AND DOCUMENTARY RESEARCH
CASE STUDIES.
THE NATURE OF ENQUIRY: SETTING THE FIELD
THEORY IN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Chapter 18 Qualitative Research: Specific Methods
© LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION AND KEITH MORRISON
Developing Racial Literacy
Types of Critical Lenses
Ethnography of Communication Somayyeh Pedram GS31063
Grade 6 Outdoor School Program Curriculum Map
CHOOSING A RESEARCH PROJECT
Chapter One Qualitative Research: An Opening Orientation
Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches Dr. William M. Bauer
© LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION AND KEITH MORRISON
Education That Is Multicultural
CASE STUDIES.
Jewitt, C. (2014). The Routledge Handbook of Multimodal Analysis
Grade 1.
CODING AND CONTENT ANALYSIS
Reading 19 Cognitively skilled organizational decision making:
How Common is Biographical Context in Writing?
Exploring Power Related Discourses
Biographical Criticism
QUALITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS 2017
ORGANIZING AND PRESENTING QUALITATIVE DATA
What is Discourse Analysis
Meta-analysis, systematic reviews and research syntheses
USING SECONDARY DATA IN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Presentation transcript:

DISCOURSES: CONVERSATIONS, NARRATIVES AND AUTOBIOGRAPHIES AS TEXTS © LOUIS COHEN, LAWRENCE MANION AND KEITH MORRISON © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

STRUCTURE OF THE CHAPTER Discourse analysis and critical discourse analysis Conversational analysis Narrative discourse Autobiography © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

WHAT IS A DISCOURSE? The meanings that are given to texts which create and shape knowledge and behaviour by the exercise of power through texts and conversations. A discourse is a way of thinking, culturally or institutionally conditioned, which is legitimated by communities, often those with power. Discourses shape, and are shaped by, different meanings. People are members of different discourse communities – those communities which hold similar values, views, ideas and ways of looking at the world. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

WHAT IS A DISCOURSE? Discourse is the ‘tactical dimension’ of the operation of power in individuals, groups and organizations. A text can be the bearer of several discourses. Discourse analysis reveals how power operates and is legitimated or challenged in and through discourses. Discourse analysis has to take account of the social contexts in which the texts are set. Discourses are often emic. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

WHAT IS A DISCOURSE? To be a discourse a text must have: Cohesion Coherence Intentionality Acceptability Informativeness Situationality Intertextuality © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

FOUR METHODS OF DISCOURSE ANALYSIS Analysing words in context. Analysing interactions conducted through language. Analysing patterns of language use. Analysing the links between language and the constitution, structure and nature of society. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

WHAT TO LOOK AT IN DISCOURSE ANALYSIS The discourse in context, in the form of text, conversation, narrative, biography etc. How power, interests and influence operate through language. Whose perspective/version is being portrayed in the discourse, and what alternatives are possible. What is absent, silenced, neglected or suppressed in the discourse. What linguistic devices are present in the discourse. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

WHAT TO LOOK AT IN DISCOURSE ANALYSIS Words in context (e.g. cultural, social, group) as ways in which people express themselves and in which context influences the language used, i.e. how context affects meaning and language. Interactions conducted through language. Patterns of language use. What is absent, silenced, neglected or suppressed in the discourse. Links between language and the constitution, structure and nature of society, often focusing on differentials of power and their reproduction. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

CRITICAL DISCOURSE ANALYSIS How power operates and is constituted, shaped, legitimated, maintained, regulated and challenged in and through language and discourses. Discourse can be both an instrument and an effect of power. Discourse is the ‘tactical dimension’ of the operation of power in individuals, groups and organizations. How power, operating through language, reproduces power differentials in society and the lifeworlds of its members. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

CRITICAL DISCOURSE ANALYSIS . . . is linked to ideology critique of power and power relations, interests and their operations. has an explicit agenda of critiquing inequalities, discrimination and ideological domination. seeks to transform and emancipate society and its members, and redress illegitimate imbalances of power and influence within relationships. interrogates ideological, political, social and economic power and how this is created, achieved, perpetuated and reproduced through discourses. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

CONVERSATIONAL ANALYSIS It is a rigorous investigation of features of a conversation, how it is generated and constructed, how it operates, what are its distinguishing features, and how participants construct their own meanings in the conversational situation. Conversations are multilayered/multilevelled. It examines different levels of meaning within a text. Looks at the contents, sequence, evolution and forms of the conversation. The more interpretive one becomes in the analysis, the more risk there is of researcher projection. Conversation analysis may include non-verbal and verbal aspects. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

A NARRATIVE DISCOURSE . . . reports personal experiences or observations and brings fresh insights to often familiar situations. tells a story. uses rich detail and carefully chosen words – for effect/power/vividness. is strongly interpretivist, with meanings constructed through observations and language. makes it difficult to separate facts from observations. Uses data selectively and reports them in non-neutral terms. Can let the researcher report a situation vividly from the perspective of the participants – their ‘definition of the situation’. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

NARRATIVE APPROACHES TO DATA ANALYSIS Humans make meaning and think in terms of ‘storied text’, which guides their actions. Narrative analysis, together with biographical data, can give the added dimension of realism, authenticity, humanity, personality, emotions, views and values in a situation.

NARRATIVE APPROACHES TO DATA ANALYSIS Narratives pass on information. Narratives bring information to life. Narratives meet people’s psychological needs in coping with life. Narratives help a group to crystallize or define an issue, view, value or perspective. Narratives can persuade or create a positive image. Narratives help researchers and readers to understand the experiences of participants and cultures. Narratives contribute to the structuring of identity.

NARRATIVES AND BIOGRAPHIES ARE SELECTIVE, BASED ON . . . Key decision points in the story or narrative Key, critical (or meaningful to the participants) events Themes Behaviours Actions People Key experiences Key places

CONSTRUCTING THE FINAL NARRATIVE By temporal sequence (a chronology) By a sequence of causal relations By key participants By key actions By emergent or key themes By key issues and clusters of issues By biographies of the participants © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

CONSTRUCTING THE FINAL NARRATIVE By critical or key events By turning points in a life history or biography By different perspectives By key decision points By key behaviours By individual case studies or a collective analysis of the unfolding of events for many cases/participants over time © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

BIOGRAPHICAL APPROACHES TO DATA ANALYSIS Biographies tend to follow a chronology. Biographies report critical or key events and moments. Biographies report key decisions and people. Biographies can establish causality. Biographies can restore broken identities or shattered futures.

NARRATIVE AND BIOGRAPHICAL APPROACHES TO DATA ANALYSIS Narratives and biographies are selective, based on: Key decision points in the story or narrative Key, critical (or meaningful to the participants) events Themes Behaviours Actions People Key experiences Key places

AUTOBIOGRAPHY We regard ‘lived time’ as a narrative, a story that has meaning for us and which shapes our lives: ‘we become the autobiographical narratives by which we “tell about” our lives’ (Bruner, 2004); our own stories direct our future lives. Stories instruct, reveal and inform. An autobiography is ‘a privileged but troubled narrative because it is both subjective and objective, reflective and reflexive, and in which the narrator is also the central figure’ (Bruner, 2004). © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

AUTOBIOGRAPHY An autobiographical narrative is multilayered and selective, and can be deconstructed at many levels, e.g.: personal, cultural, interpersonal, ideological, linguistic. An autobiography contains facts, themes, actors, a sequence, agency, coherence, situatedness and a sense of audience. The narrative may employ a chronological sequence which is interrupted to break off into reflection or comment. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors

AUTOBIOGRAPHY What is excluded is as important as what is included. Texts may be read and interpreted in many ways. © 2018 Louis Cohen, Lawrence Manion and Keith Morrison; individual chapters, the contributors