在复杂的定性案例解释中阐明辩护主体性的方法:来自最近BNIM实践的一个例子

IF 0.2 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
S. Flynn, Tom Wengraf
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引用次数: 0

摘要

很长一段时间以来,“社会心理研究”的核心一直是社会心理“防御”的概念。这是一种精神分析概念,即人们(不排除社会科学研究人员)必须被普遍理解为“被辩护的主体性”。这立即提出了一个问题,即“防御性研究人员”对他们的研究对象和他们自己之间的互动中这种“防御性”的作用是否敏感,是否有检测和解释这种作用的程序。基于传记的研究尤其强烈地提出了这些问题。其中一种方法,被称为访谈和案例解释的“传记叙事解释法”(BNIM),已经在英语国家使用了20多年。虽然BNIM为其解释实践规定了审计跟踪,但很少发现完全审计的组件序列,更很少有机会获得启发性的自由联想田野笔记,这些笔记记录了研究人员不断发展的主观性。本文讨论了在使用bnimm的博士学位的案例解释中的辩护。我们的结论是,为了击败研究者和同行审核员(本文的共同作者)的防御,需要系统地使用几种BNIM技术,特别是在某些条件下,“私人和保密”的独立同行审核员是有价值的,并且应该在任何研究计划中提供。通过同行审核,研究人员可以(通常是不舒服的)对他们原本不充分理解的辩护过程和结论的新可能性敏感。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Devices for illuminating defended subjectivities in complex qualitative case interpretation: an example from recent BNIM practice
For a long time now, fairly central to what has emerged as ‘psychosocial studies’ has been the notion of psychosocietal ‘defendedness’. This is the psychoanalytic notion that people (not excluding social science researchers) must be understood in general as being ‘defended subjectivities’. This immediately raises the question of the ‘defended researcher’ being sensitive to ‐ and having procedures for detecting and interpreting the working of ‐ such ‘defensiveness’ in the interactions of their subjects and themselves. Biography-based research raises these issues particularly strongly. One such method, known as the ‘biographical narrative interpretative method’ (BNIM) of interviewing and case interpretation, has been used in the anglophone world for more than 20 years. While BNIM prescribes an audit trail for its interpretative practices, it is rare to discover a fully audited sequence of components, and rarer still to have access to illuminating free-associative fieldnotes that catalogue the researcher’s evolving subjectivity. This article discusses defendedness in a case interpretation within a BNIM-using PhD. We conclude that, to defeat the defensiveness of both researcher and peer-auditor (the co-authors of this article), several BNIM techniques need to be used systematically and that, in particular, a ‘private and confidential’ independent peer audit is valuable under certain conditions, and should be provided for in any research proposal. Through peer audit, the researcher can be (usually uncomfortably) sensitised to new possibilities about their otherwise inadequately understood defended processes and conclusions.
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