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Article

Unreliable narrators? ¡®Inconsistency¡¯ (and some inconstancy) in interviews

Details

Citation

Watson C (2006) Unreliable narrators? ¡®Inconsistency¡¯ (and some inconstancy) in interviews. Qualitative Research, 6 (3), pp. 367-384. https://doi.org/10.1177/1468794106065008

Abstract
ABSTRACT A potentially problematic aspect of the qualitative interview is the propensity towards tensions that emerge ¨C ambiguities, inconsistencies, contradictions etc. ¨C especially when transcripts are analysed. In this article, I draw on material from an interview in which the presence of contradictory data had surprising results, initially producing shock, but subsequently causing me to reflect on the ¡®meaning¡¯ inherent in these lapses of coherence. In so doing, I present a framework for analysis, based on Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe¡¯s discourse theory, and suggest that narratives serve to construct the relational process of ¡®identification with¡¯ that links individuals to discourses. This framework enables a kind of situated reliability to emerge from the very aspects of the interview that may be held to be problematic in terms of our being ¡®unreliable narrators¡¯.

Keywords
qualitative interview; narrative; ambiguity; discourse theory; identity,; Discourse analysis; Interviewing; Ambiguity

Journal
Qualitative Research: Volume 6, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date31/08/2006
URL
PublisherSage
ISSN1468-7941
eISSN1741-3109

People (1)

Professor Cate Watson

Professor Cate Watson

Emeritus Professor, Faculty of Social Sciences