INDEX 435
Gardner, Howard, 366n14
Geertz, Clifford
on causality, 108
on choosing methodologies, 393n12
on fieldwork, 261n4
influence on interpretive research, 6
on reflexivity, 246
rejection of experimental science model, 57
and work with Bendix, 61–63, 66n15
genealogical investigation, 274–75, 280n17
generalizability, in research, 108
generalization, 4, 165
Gergen, Kenneth, xxvin13
German reconstruction, postwar, 265–66
Gestalt, interpretive, 90–91, 92–93, 97
Gibson, William, 183
Giddens, Anthony, 267
Giddings, Franklin, 55
Ginger, Clare, 203, 208
gists, in storytelling, 322
Gladstone, W.E., 285, 286
globalization, 177, 390
Goffman, Erving, 354
Golde, Peggy, 245–46
Gouldner, Alvin, 221
governance, defined by narrative, 282
governmental hearings, and globalization, 181
Grasping the Democratic Peace, 223
Green, Daniel, xxvn13
grounded theory, 105, 147n13
Guba, Egon, 93–95, 105–6, 108
Gunnell, John, 65n1
Gurr, Ted Robert, 219
Gusfield, Joseph, 208
H
habitus, 376
Hacking, Ian, xxvin13
Hall, Edward, 360
Harding, Sandra, xxvn4
Hawkesworth, Mary, 3–4, 212n5, 369
Hegel, G.W.F., 274–75
Heisenberg, Werner, 85n17
hermeneutic circularity, 15–17, 37, 78
hermeneutics
and agency, 269–70
and artifacts, 15–17
circle of, 15–17
defined by Foucault, 18
dynamics of, 18
history of, 25n24
implications of, 3
and interpretation of texts, 224
points of departure for, 9
range of methods for, 15
and semiotics, 365n4
hermeneutics, double, 266–72, 278–79
Hesse, Mary, 297
Hibbing, John, 389
historico-politics, 216–19
history, progressive, 243n34
history, reflexive, 205, 216–19
Hopf, Ted, xxvn13, 121–22
Hopper, Kim, 136
Huber, Francis, 126n3
Huberman, A. Michael, 93–94, 107
Hughes, Everett, 233
humanism, and interpretive methodology, 390–92
hypotheses, 30, 71, 82
hypothetico-deductive model, 32–33
I
identity, 257–58
indexicality, 92, 110n4, 139
induction, 30, 31, 36–37
informant feedback/member check, 104–5
Ingham, Harry, 354
Innes, Judith, 171–72
international relations (IR), 177, 180, 217–18,
292–93
Interpretation of Cultures, The, 6
interpretations, alternative, 295
interpretations, dominant, 294, 299
interpretive analysis, 71–72, 84n9, xxi–xxii, xix–xx
See also interpretive research, researchers
interpretive content analysis, 336–48
interpretive moments, in research, 19–21
interpretive research, researchers
accountability of, 67–68
analysis of, 71–72
antecedents of, 7
attacks on, 82, 393n20
and built spaces, 352–54
and causality, 108
conducting, 3–4
consistency problems of, 97, 100
criteria for practices of
classic texts on, 94t
core terminology for, 100–101
danger of applying, 376–78
debate on standards for, 94–95, 97, 100
evaluative, 4
literature on, 93
postpositivist approach to, 93–94
terminology differences in, 94, 95, 96t, 97,
98t–99t
and data analysis, 203
and faithfulness to text, 80
feminist methods of, 211
focus of perspective for, 13
and generalizability, 108
growing use of, ix–xiii
human character of, 378
in the human sciences, 367–94
improvisational quality of, 70–71, 84n8
and interview methods, 128–29