ABSTRACT

This groundbreaking text makes an intervention on behalf of disability studies into the broad field of qualitative inquiry. Ronald Berger and Laura Lorenz introduce readers to a range of issues involved in doing qualitative research on disabilities by bringing together a collection of scholarly work that supplements their own contributions and covers a variety of qualitative methods: participant observation, interviewing and interview coding, focus groups, autoethnography, life history, narrative analysis, content analysis, and participatory visual methods. The chapters are framed in terms of the relevant methodological issues involved in the research, bringing in substantive findings to illustrate the fruits of the methods. In doing so, the book covers a range of physical, sensory, and cognitive impairments. This work resonates with themes in disability studies such as emancipatory research, which views research as a collaborative effort with research subjects whose lives are enhanced by the process and results of the work. It is a methodological approach that requires researchers to be on guard against exploiting informants for the purpose of professional aggrandizement and to engage in a process of ongoing self-reflection to clear themselves of personal and professional biases that may interfere with their ability to hear and empathize with others.

part 1|43 pages

Observational Methods

chapter 2|16 pages

A Bricolage of Urban Sidewalks

Observing Locations of Inequality 1

chapter 3|16 pages

Observations of a Disability Summer Camp

The Method of Phenomenological Seeing

chapter 4|10 pages

Ethnographies of Blindness

The Method of Sensory Knowledge

part 2|51 pages

Interviews and Focus Groups

chapter 5|18 pages

Staying True to Their Stories

Interviews with Parents of Children with Disabilities

chapter 6|14 pages

Negotiating Deafness and Identity

Methodological Implications of Interviewing with Hearing Loss

chapter 7|18 pages

Talking about Sex

Focus Group Research with People with Disabilities

part 3|67 pages

Autoethnography and Life History Methods

chapter 9|28 pages

“It's Not Like You're Going to College Anyway”

A Performative Autoethnography

chapter 10|20 pages

Recovery from Spinal Cord Injury

A Theorized Life History

part 4|45 pages

Content Analysis and Visual Methods

chapter 11|12 pages

Disability and Humor in Film and Television

A Content Analysis

chapter 12|20 pages

Living with Brain Injury

Participatory Visual Methods and Narrative Analysis

chapter 13|12 pages

Sharing the Results of Visual Methods Research

Participation, Voice, and Empowerment