Giving voice and making sense in interpretative phenomenological analysis
University of Birmingham · University of Alabama at Birmingham · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Abstract In this paper, we discuss two complementary commitments of interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA): the phenomenological requirement to understand and ‘give voice’ to the concerns of participants; and the interpretative requirement to contextualize and ‘make sense’ of these claims and concerns from a psychological perspective. The methodological and conceptual bases for the relationship between these phenomenological and interpretative aspects of IPA appear to be underdeveloped in the literature. We, therefore, offer some thoughts on the basis of this relationship, and on its context within qualitative psychology. We discuss the epistemological range of IPA's interpretative focus, and its…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 14.97
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Interpretative phenomenological analysis
- Phenomenology (philosophy)
- Psychology
- Conversation analysis
- Epistemology
- Discursive psychology
- Sociology
- Discourse analysis