ABSTRACT

Interviewing is one of the most common techniques used to conduct qualitative research in the social sciences and humanities. As a result of globalization, researchers increasingly conduct interviews cross-, inter- and intra-nationally. This raises important questions about how differences and sameness are understood and negotiated within the interview situation, as well as the power structures at play within qualitative research, and the role that reflexivity plays in mediating these.

What does it mean to interview Black women as a Black woman? How is ethnicity negotiated across various qualitative research encounters? How are differences bridged or asserted in feminist interviewing? These are just some of the questions explored in the chapters in this volume. Drawing on their recent research, the contributors detail their experiences of engaging in qualitative interviewing and examine how they negotiated the various dilemmas they encountered. The contributions challenge some of the assumptions made in early feminist work on interviewing, providing nuanced accounts of actual research experiences.

This volume explores the practice and implications of conducting cross-, inter- and intra-cultural interviewing, bringing together researchers from a range of disciplines and countries to describe and analyse both its vicissitudes and its advantages.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part |63 pages

Cross-cultural interviewing

part |50 pages

Interviewing in another culture

chapter |15 pages

Living differences

Experiences from Botswana

chapter |17 pages

Being an outsider

The vicissitudes of cross-cultural interviewing in a politically and culturally sensitive context

chapter |16 pages

Dealing with being the outsider in qualitative interviewing

On interviewing representatives of British Muslim women's organisations

part |28 pages

Intra-cultural interviewing

chapter |13 pages

Interviewing outsiders as an in-/outsider

Interviewing the socially marginalised from a marginalised position

chapter |13 pages

‘So what do YOU want to talk about?'

Interactive interviewing in hard-to-reach communities

part |69 pages

The vicissitudes of interviewing ‘the same'

chapter |19 pages

The migrant interview

The researcher as migrant studying sideways

chapter |16 pages

‘Don't focus the star; try to catch the light'

Indirect questioning in interviews to explore normative assumptions in one's research focus

chapter |17 pages

Intergenerational interviewing

Exploring the silences of female experiences