Exploring the impact of interview location on knowledge development
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28920Dato
2023-03-29Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
In ethnographic and participatory studies, the study location is often claimed to have an obvious significance, whereas, in the
methodology literature on qualitative interviews, this aspect is frequently treated as a pragmatic issue. Based on this background,
there are claims that the location of an interview should be understood as a fundamental, active aspect of the research process
as well as a sensitizing concept. Considering this ambition, the aim of this article is to develop further insights into how different
interview locations may contribute to knowledge development regarding the issue being studied. Based upon a study on cancer
survivorship and experiences from conducting interviews in three different settings, namely the participants’ home, an office on
the university’s premises, and a cancer care center located at a hospital, this paper illustrates how the choice of location may
have an impact and evoke insights and knowledge regarding the research issue. The interviews conducted in private homes
provided insights into how life post cancer implicated a more house-bound lifestyle than before, with a risk of becoming isolated.
The hospital setting yielded responses that were more mixed. While some could not stand coming there, others considered the
hospital to represent safety. The third interview location, an office at the university, was the most ‘formal’ location and seemed
to resonate with the participants’ present busy but exhausting work life.
Forlag
SAGESitering
Bjørvik, Thoresen, Salomonsen, Fauske, Solbrække. Exploring the impact of interview location on knowledge development. International Journal of Qualitative Methods (IJQM). 2023Metadata
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