This edited book guides students and researchers through the processes of researching everyday stories about families. Showcasing the wide range methods and data sources currently used in narrative research, it features:
- Examples of real research into historical and contemporary family practices from around the world.
- Coverage of both traditional and cutting-edge topics, like multi-method approaches, online research, and paradata.
- Practical advice from leading figures in the field on how to incorporate these methods and data sources into family narrative research.
With accessible language and features that help readers reflect on and internalize key concepts, this book helps readers navigate researching family lives with confidence and ease.
Table des matières
Chapter 1: Researching family narratives
Chapter 2: Multi-method approaches in narrative family research across majority and minority worlds
Chapter 3: Secondary analysis of narrative data
Chapter 4: Carrying out narrative analysis on archival data
Chapter 5: Paradata: A narrative secondary analysis
Chapter 6: Researching mothers’ online blog narratives
Chapter 7: Becoming reflexive doctoral researchers: An experiment in collaborative reflexivity using a narrative approach
Chapter 8: The ethics of data re-use and secondary data analysis in narrative inquiry
Chapter 9: Endnote
A propos de l’auteur
Corinne SQUIRE is Professor of Social Sciences and Co-Director, Centre for Narrative Research, at the University of East London, and Research Associate, University of the Witwatersrand. Her research interests are in subjectivities and popular culture, narrative theory and methods, HIV and citizenship, and refugee politics.