"Then You Know How I Feel": Empathy, Identification, and Reflexivity in Fieldwork
- 1 December 1998
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Qualitative Inquiry
- Vol. 4 (4) , 492-514
- https://doi.org/10.1177/107780049800400405
Abstract
This article extends the discussion of the subjective and positioned nature of the researcher in ethnography by examining how a cancer survivor conducting fieldwork in an oncology clinic shapes and is shaped by the experience. Narratives of lived experience interrupt the academic essay to demonstrate my dynamic understanding of the clinic and the connections between my experiences and those of the patients and staff. I explore how my experiences with cancer shape how I understand the patients and staff; how viewing the clinic from multiple viewpoints affects my understanding of it; and how this process influences my understanding of my own experiences as a cancer survivor.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- It's About Time: Narrative and the Divided SelfQualitative Inquiry, 1997
- Shifting the Emphasis to 'Patient as Central': Sea Change or Ripple on the Pond?Health Communication, 1997
- Exploring Patients' Experiences as a Primary Source of MeaningHealth Communication, 1997
- Women's Narratives in Primary Care Medical EncountersWomen & Health, 1995
- “There are Survivors”: Telling A Story of Sudden DeathThe Sociological Quarterly, 1993
- Reading the vital signs: Research in health care communicationCommunication Monographs, 1993
- Telling Stories: Narrative Approaches in Qualitative ResearchImage: the Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 1991
- Physician-Patient Relationships: What Do Doctors Say?Health Communication, 1991
- Reflections: On hard workQualitative Sociology, 1986
- Doctor-patient communication: a social and micro-political performance.Sociology of Health & Illness, 1984