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Potter & Wetherell (1987), Discourse and
Social Psychology, pp. 94-187
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The remainder of this book was in 5 chapters.
- Chapter 5 was about the self.
- Chapter 6 was about membership categories.
- Chapter 7 was about interpretive repertoires (which made me think of my article critique).
- Chapter 8 was a how to section on DA.
- Chapter 9 was a summary, a final argument, and ideas for future research using DA.
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Chapter and Topic
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SP approach
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But… DA is better because…
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Ch. 5- self
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Trait Theory
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Led to role theory.
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“Trait theory is highly asocial in its approach, it
ignores the inconsistency in human behavior” (p. 97) In DA, the self is
subjective depending on the context, construction, and function of the
discourse. You can be lots of selves!
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Role Theory
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“Individuals learn to ‘refer’ to their social groups and
through a process of ‘social comparison’ adjust their identities” (p. 98).
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While this is linked to social groups, people have a
“true” role to play. It does not account for the variance in natural
settings.
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Humanistic Theory
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Is focused on finding the “authentic true self” (p. 100).
There is a “basic self” that all humans have in common- and we should strive
to find it (p. 100).
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Once again- this theory does not explain the variation
between and amongst people. It does offer that society influences the self,
but that influence has to be stripped away to get to the real self.
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Ch. 6- membership categories
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Categories- similarities make groups
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People put similar things into fixed groups or categories.
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“…people will draw flexibly on preformed categories and
construct the sense of categories as they talk” (p. 121). Natural discourse
constructs categories that are not fixed. SP category work does not take into
account the variability between people describing the same thing or an
individual describing one thing with opposing terms. Categorization in
research that attempts to decrease variability is an issue to DA researchers-
“The problem here… is that consistency becomes an achievement of the
researcher rather than a feature of discourse” (p. 123).
*Note- this is VERY different than what I’ve learned in
other Qual classes!
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Prototype categorization
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Within categories, there is a perfect example of what fits
in that category, and people use that prototype when deciding if a new thing
fits into the category. There are “fuzzy sets” or, in other words, if a new
thing has at least something in common with the prototype, it will get
chunked into that category.
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Ch. 7- interpretive repertoires
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Social representation
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“Social representations are seen as mental schemata or
images which people use to make sense of the world and to communicate with
each other” (p. 138). When people encounter new things, they anchor the thing
in a representation that already exists, which eventually transforms into
part of that representation. These representations are “consensually shared
across a number of people” (p. 144).
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DA uses interpretive repertoires instead. “Interpretive
repertoires are recurrently used systems of terms used for characterizing and
evaluating actions, events, and other phenomena” (p. 149). IRs can be
competing viewpoints and “are used to solve problems [within discourse to
account for inconsistencies or variability], but they also generate difficulties
of their own” (p. 155). These difficulties are used to bolster analysis
(variation is good!)
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Chapter 8 was probably the most practical. In it, the authors described 10 steps for using DA. They were quick to note that these are linear steps and are just offered for guidance. Particularly, I appreciated the discussion of research questions, sample size, interviews and other documents, coding, and validation. I really like that DA/ DP uses discourse and how they keep the interpretive gap as small as possible by analyzing the "raw" data. I'm not completely sold on DP, but DA seems like I could adapt to my study. I believe (after I speak with the chair of my committee) that I may change my research questions to reflect a DA approach- broad questions related to construction and function. I've also made note about providing a context for teachers to have conversations about my research topic. This chapter provides a detailed description of what that could look like in DA. I especially like the part about including the interviewer's questions. In most qual interviews, the questions are removed and hidden in an appendix. I've never quite been comfortable with dividing the questions from the answers. Coding for DA also makes more sense- it seems more visible (even if you include an iterative map) than most research I've read. Finally, I don't think that any dissertation will pass defense without some solid validation. I can see using the 4 types outlined on p. 169 in combination with others from Yin and Merriam.
I enjoyed this book a lot more and feel myself "coming around" to DP and DA epistemology. (Not completely- I still envision using this as a hybrid with "regular" qual work.) I think that Potter and Wetherell made a less aggressive argument for DA, and I'm thinking that DA and DP are more different than I realized last week.
I see your note that said this was very different from what you've learned in other qual courses, but I couldn't tell exactly what you were referring to? Would like to hear more.
ReplyDeleteWood and Kroger's "Doing Discourse Analysis" has a good section on validation/trustworthiness standards. I would recommend not mixing case study methodology with discourse analysis methodology in terms of concepts because they are epistemologically different. I can also send you the syllabus/readings list for the fall class in case any of those are useful for you.
Great summary chart!