Listen "How and Why Interviews Work: Ethnographic Interviews and Meso-level Public Culture."
Episode Synopsis
Rinaldo, R., & Guhin, J. (2022). How and Why Interviews Work: Ethnographic Interviews and Meso-level Public Culture. Sociological Methods & Research, 51(1), 34–67.Rinaldo and Guhin's article explores the use of ethnographic interviews in sociological research. They argue that these interviews are crucial for understanding the interplay between different modes of culture: declarative, nondeclarative, and public. The authors propose dividing Lizardo's concept of public culture into meso- and macro-levels to better differentiate between interview types. They suggest that ethnographic interviews, conducted within specific social locations, uniquely access meso-level public culture and its interactions with other cultural modes. By analyzing existing studies and Guhin's own fieldwork, the article demonstrates the value of ethnographic interviews in understanding complex cultural dynamics within specific contexts, such as schools. The article also offers practical guidance for researchers aiming to leverage interviews within broader ethnographic projects.keepSave to notecopy_alldocsAdd noteaudio_magic_eraserAudio OverviewschoolBriefing doc
More episodes of the podcast Max's reading list
Relational ethnography. Theory and Society
03/03/2025
Generalizability Theory: A Primer Ch1
07/02/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.