The ethnographic interview: an interdisciplinary guide for developing an ethnographic disposition in health research

Catherine Trundle, John Gardner, Tarryn Phillips

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Interviews are central to the health ethnographers’ toolkit. In this article, we offer a critical engagement with methodological literature coupled with reflective examples from our own research, in order to articulate the value of the ethnographic interview in health research. We contribute to literature on ethnographic interviews in two ways: by decoupling ethnographic interviews from the necessity of accompanying participant observation, and by outlining an ethnographic disposition towards interviewing. We define the seven key epistemic dispositions underpinning the ethnographic interview. These are humility, a readiness to revise core assumptions about a research topic, attentiveness to context, relationality, openness to complexity, an attention to ethnographic writing, and a consideration of the politics and history of the method. The strength of an epistemic understanding of the ethnographic interview is that it offers flexibility for developing a diverse array of interview techniques responsive to the needs of different research contexts and challenges. Ethnographic interviews, we show, contribute to the study of health through a richly explorative, responsive, contextualised, and reflexive approach.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages15
JournalQualitative Health Research
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2024

Keywords

  • ethnographic interview
  • ethnographic disposition
  • interviews
  • methodology
  • qualitative interview
  • health ethnography

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