This book examines the interactional management of emotionality in second language autobiographical interview research. Advancing a discursive constructionist approach, it offers a timely methodological and reflexive perspective that brings into focus the dynamic and dilemmatic aspects of interviewee and interviewer identities and experiences, and it makes visible the often unexpected and unseen consequences for the research project and beyond. The author weaves together critical discussion and empirical analysis based on longitudinal, narrative-based research with adult immigrants from Southeast Asia living in the US and Canada. This interdisciplinary book will be compelling reading for students, researchers, and others interested in emotion, narrative, discourse, identity, interaction, interviews, and qualitative research.
Table of Content
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Chapter 1. Getting Emotional
Chapter 2. Constructing Discourse
Chapter 3. Telling and Remembering
Chapter 4. Inviting Emotional Tellings
Chapter 5. Eliciting Feelings
Chapter 6. (Re)Formulating Emotionality
Chapter 7. Managing Emotionality and Distress
Chapter 8. Being ‘Negative’
Chapter 9. Reflecting Back, Moving Forward
References
About the author
Matthew T. Prior is Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Arizona State University. His research interests include emotion and other socio-psychological dimensions of second language learning and use, multilingualism and identity, transcultural belonging, discursive constructionist approaches (narrative, conversation analysis, discursive psychology, membership categorization analysis), and qualitative methodologies.