Article published In: Narrative Inquiry
Vol. 20:2 (2010) ► pp.274–295
Big stories co-constructed
Incorporating micro-analytical interpretative procedures into biographic research
Published online: 10 December 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.20.2.03hel
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.20.2.03hel
Tying up to previous narrative work that is concerned with the interrelations between big story and small story research (Bamberg, 2006; Freeman, 2006; Georgakopoulou, 2006b), this article aims to demonstrate that big story research can profit from methodological procedures that understand narrative research interviews as interactional encounters and positions assigned to the narrator during this encounter as impinging on the biographic accounts they deliver. For that purpose, I take the interaction between the interviewer and the interviewee — both before and during the actual interview — as an analytical point of departure and argue that the self-constructions that narrators undertake when engaging in (auto)biographic self-reflection have to and can only be understood against the background of this embedding interaction.
Keywords: narrative analysis, big stories, small stories, self-reflection, co-construction
Cited by (9)
Cited by nine other publications
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Klausen, Rita K., Marie Karlsson, Svein Haugsgjerd & Geir Fagerjord Lorem
2017. Narrative performances of user involvement among service users in mental health care. Narrative Inquiry 27:1 ► pp. 149 ff.
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