Interview Talk: Bringing off a Research Instrument
- 1 January 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociology
- Vol. 7 (1) , 31-48
- https://doi.org/10.1177/003803857300700103
Abstract
Recent attempts to develop symbolic interactionist methodologies have sought to treat the interview as an object of sociological enquiry as well as a research instrument. But their accounts in terms of interactional rules and presentation of selves are primarily concerned with reactions to interviews, and the display of the interview setting in talk is treated as a resource rather than as a topic for investigation. Since such a reliance on the availability of phenomena is also a feature of the `natural attitude', lay and sociological usages of the interview share striking similarities. More specifically, both employ the documentary method of interpretation and, in order to claim a correspondence between their accounts and some external reality, use remedies to counter misunderstandings. On the basis of tapes of selection interviews, the paper examines the competences and policies routinely adopted to provide for the contexting of talk as interview talk. Given that talk serves to display its setting (this is its reflexive character), talk becomes interview talk as members' managed accomplishment of a knowable context.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Family Stability: A Comparison of Trends Between Blacks and WhitesAmerican Sociological Review, 1971