Analyzing the Researcher's Work in Generating Data: The Case of Complaints
- 1 December 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Qualitative Inquiry
- Vol. 7 (6) , 745-772
- https://doi.org/10.1177/107780040100700607
Abstract
This article investigates the researcher's work in the coproduction (or not) of complaint sequences in research interviews. Using a conversation analytic approach, we show how the interviewer's management of complaint sequences in a research setting is consequential for subsequent talk and thus directly affects the data generated. In the examples shown here, researchers sharing cocategorial incumbency with respondents may well provide spaces for research participants to formulate complaints. This article examines sequences of talk surrounding complaints to show how researchers generate complaints (or not) and handle unsafe complaints. Researchers are able to provoke specific types of accounts from respondents, whereas their respondents may actively resist the researchers’ direction. For researchers using the interview as a method of data generation, examination of complaint sequences and how these appear in interview data provides insight into how interview talk is coproduced and managed within a socially situated setting.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Extreme Case Formulations: Softeners, Investment, and Doing NonliteralResearch on Language and Social Interaction, 2000
- Complaints About Transgressions and MisconductResearch on Language and Social Interaction, 1998
- Kundera's Immortality: The Interview Society and the Invention of the SelfQualitative Inquiry, 1997
- The Active InterviewPublished by SAGE Publications ,1995
- Conversation AnalysisAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1990
- On the Sequential Organization of Troubles-Talk in Ordinary ConversationSocial Problems, 1988
- Learning How to AskPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1986
- Extreme case formulations: A way of legitimizing claimsHuman Studies, 1986
- A “second look” at interviews with adolescentsJournal of Youth and Adolescence, 1983
- "Atrocity Stories" and Professional RelationshipsSociology of Work and Occupations, 1977