Drew2006c

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Drew2006c
BibType COLLECTION
Key Drew2006c
Author(s)
Title Talk and Interaction in Social Research Methods
Editor(s) Paul Drew, Geoffrey Raymond, Darin Weinberg
Tag(s) EMCA, Research Methods, Racism
Publisher Sage
Year 2006
Language
City London
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages
URL Link
DOI
ISBN 9780761957058
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This is the first book of its kind to offer such a powerful and insightful depiction of the role of talk-in-interaction in relation to social research methods. The book's plan is creative and unparalleled. There's nothing else like it.

The editors—Paul Drew, Geoffrey Raymond and Darin Weinberg—represent the very best from multiple traditions of researching talk-in-interaction—from both sides of the Atlantic. The chapters are written by a sterling collection of researchers—a virtual honor roll of conversation analysts and kindred spirits.

This book is a "must read" for social researchers of all disciplines who are interested in social interaction. It should be assigned reading for all graduate students being introduced to qualitative methods. It should be on every qualitative researcher's book shelf. It is a tour de force in demonstrating the absolutely fundamental position that language use holds in social science methodology' - James A Holstein, Marquette University


This is a methodology text with a difference. It demonstrates the importance of talk in a variety of social research methodologies. Even documents, the seemingly least interactional form of social data, are shown to have important interactional dimensions. The book focuses systematically on how sociological methods are essentially conducted through forms of spoken interaction, and how these interactions shape the results that emerge in research. The book demonstrates:

• How spoken interactions shape the outcomes of core research methodologies • The role which talk-in-interaction plays in key substantive areas of sociology notably race, crime, gender and media • Reveals the interactional underpinnings of research methodologies

This is the first text aimed at an undergraduate and Master's audience in Sociology and Social Research, which shows the crucial part that spoken interaction plays in the conduct and products of conventional sociological methodologies.

Notes