Document Type

Book Chapter

Publication Date

2020

Published In

Oxford Research Encyclopedias: Psychology

Abstract

Qualitative inquiry is a form of psychological research that seeks in-depth understanding of people and their social worlds. Qualitative researchers typically study the experiences of people as meaning-making agents, relying on verbal material. Qualitative inquiry has a long history in psychology, beginning in the 19th century with founders of psychology like William James and Wilhelm Wundt. However, for much of the 20th century, qualitative inquiry has occupied a marginal position in the discipline. This marginalization is best understood in relation to the discipline’s early struggle to be regarded as legitimate. Adopting the methods of the natural sciences—notably quantification and measurement—was a means to that end. Qualitative approaches, though suppressed for much of the 20th century, were not entirely eliminated from the field. Personality theorists, for example, continued to make use of them. The 1970s marked the advent of new forms of qualitative inquiry in psychology, which drew from a variety of intellectual and philosophical movements. These developments continued to gain acceptance and adherents. Since the turn of the 20th century, national and international organizations of qualitative researchers in psychology have been established. Venues for publishing qualitative research in psychology have increased. Nonetheless, qualitative inquiry is still marginalized in many academic psychology departments, and training in qualitative methods is seldom part of the methods curriculum.

Keywords

turn to language, qualitative methods, interpretation, phenomenology, discursive psychology, grounded theory, social construction, power/knowledge, narrative, study of lives

Published By

Oxford University Press

Editor(s)

O. Braddick

Comments

This material was originally published in Oxford Research Encyclopedias: Psychology edited by Ingrid Johnsrude, and has been reproduced by permission of Oxford University Press. For permission to reuse this material, please visit the publisher's website.

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