Autobiographical and Narrative Research
Autobiographical and Narrative Research
Autobiographical and Narrative Research
Biographical research is part of the broader practice of qualitative methods: Qualitative researchers tend to espouse an approach in which theory and empirical investigation are interwoven . . . during or at the end of fieldwork, rather than being a precursor to it (Bryman 1988: 81). Qualitative research has a number of features stemming from its philosophical and theoretical approach to the social world, including remaining close to the experiences and views of the researched.
While biographical research shares a common outlook with qualitative research more generally, it also has its own specific challenges. An initial problem in the field of biographical research is the differing use of terms oral history, personal narrative, biography and autobiography and their interchangeable use (Reinharz 1992: 129). However, a common distinction is made between life story and life history. A life story is the story a person chooses to tell about the life he or she has lived, told as completely and honestly as possible, what is remembered of it, and what the teller wants others to know of it, usually as a result of a guided interview by another . . . A life story is a fairly complete narrating of ones entire experience of life as a whole, highlighting the most important aspects. (Atkinson 1998: 8)
The life history is usually taken to refer to the collection, interpretation and report writing of the life (the life history method) in terms of the story told or as the construction of the past experience of the individual (from various sources) to relate to the story (see Denzin 1970: 21959; Fischer-Rosenthal and Rosenthal 1997: 9). Therefore, the term life story is commonly applied to the narrated story by the author while life history infers the later interpretive, presentational work of the researcher. However, such a distinction is difficult to maintain in practice where, for example, the researcher conducts an interview with a participant. In general, in this book, the term biographical research will be used to denote work which uses the stories of individuals and other personal materials to understand the individual life within its social context.
3 Major Questions
1. What is the main focus of research? 2. What is the aim of research? 3. What are the methods?
Aim of Research
For some researchers the central aim of research is to produce rich descriptions (of persons) whereas others aim to conceptualize structural types (action logics or how persons and structures are interlinked). Each method of the following approaches could be used to do both even though some researchers completely refuse the possibility of generalizations.
Methods use
approaches using a broad range of material as e.g. letters, publications, autobiographical writing, research which uses the Narrative Interview (Schtze 1976, 1983, compare Rosenthal 2004), and semi-structured interview-strategies (e.g. problem centered interview, Witzel 2000).
Biographical Identity
The biographical research, which focuses on biographical identity or biographical structuring (Fischer-Rosenthal 2000, 114ff.), assumes that the link between structure and individuals could only be understood sufficiently by analyzing the development of the individual personality in the life course. Thus the excessive analysis of the single case is emphasized and the discovery of the issues not mentioned in the interview is important for a sufficient case analysis.
Biographical Identity
This approach is strongly linked to phenomenology and A. Schtzs work. The core idea is that during the life course individuals accumulate diverse biographical experiences into a coherent description of their life course. These experiences are present in our knowledge we use in everyday life, biographical decision-making as well as in the story we present in an interview-situation. Our self-representations or biographical stories are linked to these experiences they are not totally free from our past. The link into the past gives us the possibility to do research on the past life history and the development of the todays self out of the present perspective. Against this background this research tries to assess the difference between experienced life history (our past experiences) and narrated life story (how we interpret our life from the current point of view) in order to show how their current biography or selfdescription is determined by the past experiences.