This article explores the possibilities of working ethnomethodological and conversation analysis methods into narrative analytic research, in relation to the understanding of narrative practices and identity work carried out in the course of the interview interaction. More specifically, we discuss how a storyteller (Olivia) in a research interview inserts a complaint story about her mother's intense objection to her choice of partner, into a relatively ordinary romance tale, and subsequently subverts it. Various conversational strategies, such as recipient design, topic shift and evaluation and assessment, are worked alongside the narrative dimensions of tellibility, tellership and moral stance (Ochs & Capps, 2001) to demonstrate the narrative achievement of an ordinary – but special – identity, in the retelling of events related to Olivia's courtship and the first few weeks of her marriage. (Australian-Italian Narrative Research, Ethnomethodology, Conversation Analysis)
2014. Ethics and the Social Dimension of Research Activities. Human Studies 37:2 ► pp. 257 ff.
Paoletti, Isabella & Sandra Gomes
2014. Future talk in later life. Journal of Aging Studies 29 ► pp. 131 ff.
Paolettti, Isabella
2014. Introduction to the Special Issue: “Ethical Issues in Collecting Interactional Data”. Human Studies 37:2 ► pp. 167 ff.
Vásquez, Camilla
2007. Moral stance in the workplace narratives of novices. Discourse Studies 9:5 ► pp. 653 ff.
Roulston, Kathryn
2006. Close encounters of the ‘CA’ kind: a review of literature analysing talk in research interviews. Qualitative Research 6:4 ► pp. 515 ff.
Johnson, Greer Cavallaro, Simon Clarke & Neil Dempster
2005. The Discursive (Re)construction of Parents in School Texts. Language and Education 19:5 ► pp. 380 ff.
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