“There is no other way that conversation is being studied
systematically except my way” (Sacks, 1992, Vol. 2: 549 as in Hutchby &
Wooffitt, 2008, p. 3).
I have yet
to read a textbook that gives such reverence to its subject creator (I am not sure how else I wanted to say that). Although I am still digesting the ideas
postulated in Hutchby and Wooffitt (2009), I am completely amazed at how highly
Sacks is portrayed. This is just an
observation, but Sacks must have been a unicorn, or the mythical wizard that
created them. I am not taking anything
away from the man, he obviously has introduced an entirely unique methodology
into qualitative research, and he does deserve respect, but he is almost deified
by the authors.
Regardless of
the iconic portrayal of Sacks, I am intrigued by what I am reading thus far,
and this text is not what I expected. We
were told that students either love Hutchby and Wooffitt (2009) or hate it,
and, to my own surprise, I am in favor of it thus far. I am intrigued by the examples given in the
texts, and the illustrations of turn-by-turn conversations, adjacency-pairs,
and preferences, the organization of turn-taking (all discussed in chapter
2). These portrayals of conversation and
their analysis are clear to me. However,
I am also still trying to clarify my own understanding of what ‘context’ means
in this text.
Chapter 1
discusses three criticisms of ethnography (a methodology of interest to
me). The first criticism is that
ethnographers use “insiders” in order to gain information instead of the
activities. I have read and reread that,
and I still cannot make sense of that.
Ethnography studies the context and the people within that space—along
with their actions (field observations), and often times the researcher is the
participant. The second criticism is
that ethnography depends on the “…commonsense knowledge on the members of
society as a resource… not as a topic of study” (Hutchby & Wooffitt, 2009,
p. 23) So does that mean that ethnography should be looking deeper into what
that group of people deems as common knowledge and only focus on that? Then it would not be ethnography, right? Again, I am just thinking aloud and trying to
think these ideas through. Finally (and
this is the last criticism that I found the most difficult to grasp) is
this: Sacks wanted his research to be
replicable—so that the person could have the exact words spoken and reanalyze
the conversation in order to find the same results. This is difficult to digest. Why does that matter? The idea of qualitative research is not about
replication—however, maybe he (Sacks) felt by exploring conversation (naturally
occurring, exactly transcribed) in this manner, that it would be more
valid--he even said that it was "...more concrete than the Chicago stuff tended to be" (Sacks, 1992, Vol 1:27 as in Hutchby and Wooffitt, 2009, p. 23). Here is my view (critical as it
is—and context matters here). In our
first text, we read that people construct meaning together. Also, that collective meaning is socially
constructed, and therefore contextual.
So, although I read the examples and the turn-by-turn analysis in the
later chapters, and it made absolute sense, it is because someone told me what
it meant. I do not know for sure if I
read those conversations without the analysis that I would come to the same
conclusions as the authors, so is CA replicable? If it is, why does it have to be? Is it supposed to be? That is the impression
that I got when reading this section.
Also, what
about “membership categories”? Would not
this term be akin to positionality or intersectionality as I learned about in
Critical Race Theory? When you assume
someone’s membership category as a wife and a mother, those categories do not
have the same meaning for all of us, but as I was reading, it seems that Sacks
assumes that there was an agreed upon social meaning of those terms. In which society? Female has more than one connotation or social
meaning in different cultures, one example that comes to mind is within Muslim,
Christianity, and Wiccan practices—so, whose social construct are we relying on
here? The dominant culture? In no way am I trying to cause trouble—I am
only trying to understand what I am reading.
I do accept the idea of a socially universal term in most cases—a mother
is a person who has borne a child. That,
I believe is something on which everyone can agree. However, within the conversation on page 37
with the boy talking about a “chick” he was hanging around with, the analysis
assumes that a ‘chick’ implies a ‘cool’ or ‘hip’ person. On a personal level, I can see that, because
I am white and that is my definition of ‘chick’. When slang terms are brought into the
conversation, assumptions may not be that easy, as like language itself, colloquial terms are fluid, and I feel even
more so, especially with the advancement of technology. New words such as “googleable” , “facebooking”,
“trolling”, or “trolls”, “lurking”—they are either entirely new to the lexicon,
or some words are reinvented. This is
something that is not addressed. What
does a conversation analyist do with that?
Would not context matter?
Again, I do
like what I am reading, and I love the idea of CA—I am having difficulty making
sense of it, because it seems contradictory—the words matter, but we assume there
are social assumptions being made that may not be true for all groups.
Ha ha ha, it's true - I was also struck by how reverently Hutchby and Wooffitt treat Sacks :)
ReplyDeleteHere's an insight that may help: Conversation analysts do not consider themselves qualitative researchers! We'll talk more about this tonight, but this is why some of what they are claiming sounds so strange to us...re: replicability.
Great insights about membership category analysis - hopefully the analyst is looking to the data to see which aspects of the category are made relevant in the talk - because as you point out, what a "mother" means can vary a lot from culture to culture. I remember this question came up earlier about how much CA work is being done outside of Western/American contexts...and I'm really not sure. Something for us to investigate...
Great blog post, btw!