The Dictionary of Human Geography

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There are many different qualitative
methods, and typologies for classifying them.
Winchester (2000), for instance, identifies
three categories of qualitative methods: oral
(e.g. unstructuredinterviewsandinterview-
ing,focus groups, and life histories), textual
analysis (seetextandtextuality) and partici-
pant observation (or ethnography). Despite the
diversity of qualitative methods used by geog-
raphers, Crang (2002, p. 650) notes a surpris-
ing tendency to favour interviews over
ethnography – surprising because ethnography
would seem to be more in line with field-based
geographical traditions. Yet Herbert (2000)
has calculated that only 3–5 per cent of journal
articles draw on ethnographic research. The
reasons for this are various, and include: diffi-
culties in gaining access (McDowell, 1998);
challenges of doing ethnographic fieldwork
within existing institutional and funding
time frames (Cook, 2001b) and disciplinary
scepticism about the merits of ethnography
(Herbert, 2000).
Two further methodological omissions have
been noted. First, visual data tend to be
under-used, relative to oral testimony or text.
Crang (2003, p. 500) reasons that qualitative
researchers have been influenced by critiques
of vision as a medium for a detached, mascu-
linist, objectifying gaze: ‘If copresence is the
privileged ground of qualitative truth claims, it
is against a foil of ‘‘bad’’ vision’ (seevision
and visuality). Especially given heightened
concerns about the politics of representation,
‘qualitative fieldwork almost turns away from
the visual to avoid accusations of ‘‘academic
tourism’’ and objectification’ (p. 500). Rejec-
tion of the visual is, however, by no means
complete, and non-representational the-
oryand a focus onperformanceand the
bodyhave generated many intriguing experi-
ments with visual data and methodologies,
some of which are reviewed by Crang. In her
textbook on visual methods, Rose (2007
[2001]) provides an excellent overview of a
wide range of visual data; questions that can
be addressed through them; and a variety of
strategies for analysing them. An over-em-
phasis on discourse and representation
grounds a second concern about the limita-
tions of geographers’ use of qualitative
methods: this is that too little attention has
been directed to how people do things, as
opposed to how they see the world or what
they say about it. Smith argues that this has
prompted a ‘second crisis of representation’
that focuses on the limits of representability
(Smith, S.J., 2001, p. 28), and the importance

of knowing through practice and recording
fully sensual, richly emotional, momentary
practices of social lives. Although qualitative
methods are now widely used throughout the
discipline, Thrift (2000a, p. 244) notes that
even ‘cultural geography still draws on a re-
markably limited number of methodologies –
ethnography, focus groups, and the like –
which are nearly always cognitive in origin
and effect’. Large claims have been made of
themethodologicalimplications of non-rep-
resentational theory: it is ‘suggestive of noth-
ing less than a drive towards a new
methodological avant garde that will radically
refigure what it is todoresearch’ (Latham,
2003, p. 2000). Writing in 2005, Lorimer
notes that ‘the creativity [promised by non-
representational theory] in research design
and method still needs to be unshackled’
(p. 89). Given the emphasis on knowledge
through practice, there is renewed interest in
symbolic interactionism, phenomenology and
ethnomethodology. As much as using rad-
ically different methods, it may be a matter of
re-examining the potential of existing ones; for
instance, to excavate everyday practices in
archival evidence, or to conduct, experience
and record interviews as fully embodied con-
versational performances in which subtle shifts
inaffect, tone and bodily comportment are as
significant as what is said. And an argument
that social life exceeds discourse need not lead
researchers away from discourse; as Nash
(2000) has argued, even a practice such as
dance – one that drew a great deal of attention
in early formulations of non-representational
styles of thinking – is not excessive to discourse
but, rather, is a complex amalgam of discourse
and embodied knowledges. Language itself has
multiplerelations toaction: Chari(2003)draws
on linguistic anthropology to considerlan-
guageas an indexical and not just referential
practice, and to consider the multiple relations
between language and action.
Given an enquiring attitude about what
counts as useful knowledge and recent interest
in performance and the ‘doing’ of social life,
qualitative researchers are reassessing what
counts as valuable research ‘products’, includ-
ing relatively private and fleeting ones (Thrift,
2000). For instance, whilst conducting an eth-
nography in a village in Pakistan, a Muslim
community in which women supposedly dis-
approved of being photographed, Besio (Besio
and Butz, 2004) was asked by some of the
resident women to photograph them privately
in out-of-the-way places. Besio reads these
secretive photography sessions as expressions

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QUALITATIVE METHODS
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