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
Jennifer Platt
David Riesman and Nathan Glazer
Epistemology: The Concept of an ‘Interview Society’
Paul Atkinson and David Silverman
James A. Holstein and Jaber F. Gubrium
Epistemology: Perspectives on the Interview
Carl R. Rogers
Ann Oakley
David Silverman
Part II. COMPARING, CONTRASTING, AND INTEGRATING TYPES AND MODES
Douglas W. Maynard and Nora Cate Schaeffer
Giampietro Gobo
Niall Hamilton-Smith and Matt Hopkins
New Types of Research Interviews
Postmodern Interviewing
Roberta G. Sands and Michal Krumer-Nevo
Online Interviewing
Natilene Bowker and Keith Tuffin
Lokman I. Meho
Ted J. Gaiser
Definitive Treatments of Established Interview Types and Modes
Survey Interviews
Norman M. Bradburn
Eleanor R. Gerber and Tracy R. Wellens
Dawn D. Nelson
Wendy Sykes and Martin Collins
Yfke P. Ongena and Wil Dijkstra
VOLUME II
Part II. COMPARING, CONTRASTING, AND INTEGRATING TYPES AND MODES (Continued )
Focus Groups
David L. Morgan
Esther I. Madriz
Margaret Chandler
Lynn Smith-Lovin and Charles Brody
Greg Myers
Life History Interviews
Margaret B. Blackman
Daniel Bertaux and Martin Kohli
Deborah Freedman, Arland Thornton, Donald Camburn, Duane Alwin and Linda Young-DeMarco
CATI and CAPI
Howard E. Freeman
Carol C. House
Jean Martin, Colm O’Muircheartaigh and John Curtice
Comparing Interview Modes
Henry F. Woltman, Anthony G. Turner and John M. Bushery
William S. Aquilino
Part III. DESIGNING INTERVIEW-BASED RESEARCH
Access and Refusal
Mick P. Couper
Keeping Track: Recording and Representing Interview Encounters
Recording
Joseph C. Bevis
Raymond M. Lee
Susan A. Speer and Ian Hutchby
Martyn Hammersley
Transcription
Judith C. Lapadat and Anne C. Lindsay
Blake D. Poland
Kim Etherington
Designing Questions and Constructing Instruments
Question Wording
Nora Cate Schaeffer
Hanneke Houtkoop-Steenstra and Charles Antaki
VOLUME III
Part III. DESIGNING INTERVIEW-BASED RESEARCH (Continued )
Constructing Instruments
Norman M. Bradburn, Seymour Sudman, Ed Blair and Carol Stocking
Pamela C. Campanelli, Elizabeth A. Martin and Jennifer M. Rothgeb
Seymour Sudman
Enhancements of Interview Research Designs
Howard Stanton, Kurt W. Back and Eugene Litwak
Everett F. Cataldo, Richard M. Johnson, Lyman A. Kellstedt and Lester W. Milbrath
Cheryl S. Alexander and Henry Jay Becker
Eleanor Singer, John Van Hoewyk, Nancy Gebler, Trivellore Raghunathan and Katherine McGonagle
Part IV. CONDUCTING INTERVIEWS
Interview Technique: Probing, Self-Disclosure and Joint Interviews
Johannes H. Smit, Wil Dijkstra and Johannes van der Zouwen
William Foddy
Jackie Abell, Abigail Locke, Susan Condor, Stephen Gibson and Clifford Stevenson
Graham Allan
Co-Producing Interview Data and Working with Rapport
David Riesman and Mark Benney
Harry H. Hiller and Linda DiLuzio
David Riesman
V. FIELD RELATIONS
Sensitive Topics
Julia Brannen
Roger Tourangeau and Tom W. Smith
Erica Owens
Power, Gender and Interviewer/Participant Relations
Guy Enosh and Eli Buchbinder
Christine L. Williams and E. Joel Heikes
Steinar Kvale
VOLUME IV
Part VI. INTERVIEWERS: CHARACTERISTICS, QUALITIES, EFFECTS
W. Andrew Collins
Robert M. Groves and Nancy H. Fultz
June Sachar Ehrlich and David Riesman
Nora Cate Schaeffer
Yvonne Tixier y Vigil and Nan Elsasser
Part VII. INTERVIEWEES
Interviewing Special Respondents: The Vulnerable
Paul R. Amato and Gay Ochiltree
Jan Nespor
Gerald Hoinville
Carol K. Sigelman, Edward C. Budd, Cynthia L. Spanhel and Carol J. Schoenrock
Interviewing Special Respondents: Elites
Erwin O. Smigel
Part VIII. ANALYSING INTERVIEW DATA
Handling Context, Subjectivity, Perspective and Scope
David Riesman and Nathan Glazer
David Riesman and Nathan Glazer
Michael Agar
Contemporary Articulations of Interview Analysis: The Accounts Perspective
Geoffrey Baruch
Timothy John Rapley
Contemporary Articulations of Interview Analysis: New Feminist Perspectives
Hannah Frith and Celia Kitzinger
Contemporary Articulations of Interview Analysis: Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis
Kathryn Roulston
Contemporary Articulations of Interview Analysis: The Reflexive Interview and Performativities
Norman K. Denzin
Part IX. DOES IT DO WHAT IT SAYS ON THE LABEL? THE UTILITY OF INTERVIEW RESEARCH
Bias and Cross-Cultural Interviewing
Won Moo Hurh and Kwang Chung Kim
Rachelle Hole
Integrating and Validating Interview-Based Research
N. J. Molenaar
William H. Desvousges and James H. Frey
Aaron V. Cicourel
David Silverman