ABSTRACT

Biographical research methods have become a useful and popular tool for contemporary social scientists. This book combines an exploration of the historical and philosophical origins of this important field of qualitative research with comparative examples of the different ways that biographical methods have been successfully applied internationally. Through these many illustrative examples of socio-biography in process the authors show how formal textual analysis, whilst uncovering hidden emotional defences, can also shed light on wider historical processes of societal transformation.
Topics discussed include:
*individual and linked lives
*generational change
*political influences on memory and identity
*biographical work in reflexive societies
*narrativity and empowerment in professional practice
*ways of theorising and generalising from case-studies.
Biographical Methods in the Social Sciences promotes debate and provides opportunities for students and researchers to widen their uses of narrative research.

chapter |30 pages

Introduction

The biographical turn

part |2 pages

Part 1 Issues of methodology and theory

chapter 2|18 pages

Biographical analysis

A ‘German’ school?

chapter 3|19 pages

Case histories of families and social processes

Enriching sociology

chapter 4|19 pages

The vanishing point of resemblance

Comparative welfare as philosophical anthropology

chapter 6|39 pages

Clinical hermeneutics

From the ontology of self to a case example

part |2 pages

Part 2 Examples of biographical methods in use

chapter 9|15 pages

Texts in a changing context

Reconstructing lives in East Germany

chapter 13|17 pages

Researching the implications of family change for older people

The contribution of a life-history approach

chapter 14|15 pages

Biography and identity

Life story work in transitions of care for people with profound learning difficulties

chapter 15|14 pages

Understanding the carers’ world

A biographical-interpretive case study

chapter 16|15 pages

Single mothers and Berlin life-styles

A new mode of social reproduction

chapter 17|16 pages

Part of the system

The experience of home-based caring in West Germany

chapter 18|16 pages

Modernisation as lived experience

Contrasting case studies from the SOSTRIS project