Qualitative research is an interdisciplinary, transdisciplinary, and sometimes counterdisciplinary field. It crosses the humanities and the social and physical sciences. Qualitative research is many things at the same time. It is multiparadigmatic in focus. Its practitioners are sensitive to the value of the multimethod approach. They are committed to the naturalistic perspective, and to the interpretative understanding of human experience. At the same time, the field is inherently political and shaped by multiple ethical and political positions.
‘Qualitative Research…involves finding out what people think, and how they feel - or at any rate, what they say they think and how they say they feel. This kind of information is subjective. It involves feelings and impressions, rather than numbers’
Traditional Period: 1900’s-World War II
Wrote objective colonising accounts of field experiences that were reflective of the positivist scientist paradigm
Concerned with offering valid, reliable, and objective interpretations in their writings.
The ‘subject’ who was studied was alien, foreign, and strange.
The modernist ethnographer and sociological participant observer attempted rigorous, qualitative studies of important social processes, including social control in the classroom and society
Researchers were drawn to qualitative research because it allowed them to give a voice to society’s ‘underclass
Emphasises that human reason is supreme and that there is a single objective truth that can be discovered by science
Encourages us to stress the function of objects, celebrate technology and to regard the world as a rational, ordered place with a clearly defined past, present and future
Argues that our society places too much emphasis on science and technology and that this ordered, rational view of consumers denies the complexity of the social and cultural world we live in
Stresses the importance of symbolic, subjective experience