TY - BOOK AU - Josselson, Ruthellen AU - Josselson, Ruthellen TI - Ethics and Process in the Narrative Study of Lives T2 - Narrative Study of Lives series SN - 9780761902379 U1 - 150.72 JOS PY - 1996/// CY - London PB - : SAGE Publications, KW - Psychology KW - Psychology -- Biographical methods KW - Self-presentation KW - Discourse analysis, Narrative KW - Biography -- Psychological aspects KW - Ethik KW - Narratives Interview N1 - Cover; Contents; Introduction; Part I; Chapter 1 -- Some Reflections About Narrative Research and Hurt and Harm; Chapter 2 -- Ethical Issues in Biographical Interviews and Analysis; Chapter 3 -- Expert Witness: Who Controls the Psychologist's Narrative?; Chapter 4 -- Personal Vulnerability and Interpretive Authority in Narrative Research; Chapter 5 -- On Writing Other People's Lives: Self-Analytic Reflections of a Narrative Researcher; Chapter 6 -- Narrating a Psychoanalytic Case Study. Chapter 7 -- Who Benefits From an Examined Life? Correlates of Influence Attributed to Participation in a Longitudinal StudyPart II; Chapter 8 -- Interpreting Life Stories; Chapter 9 -- Telling From Behind Her Hand: African American Women and the Process of Documenting Concealed Lives; Chapter 10 -- Ethics and Understanding Through Interrelationship: I and Thou in Dialogue; Part III; Chapter 11 -- Ethnography and Hagiography: The Dialectics of Life, Story, and Afterlife; Chapter 12 -- Some Unforeseen Outcomes of Conducting Narrative Research With People of One's Own Culture; Part IV. Chapter 13 -- A Historian's Perspective on InterviewingChapter 14 -- Snakes in the Swamp: Ethical Issues in Qualitative Research; Chapter 15 -- TheTale of the Anthropologist and the Kumina Queen: Two Voices in an Ethnographic Interview; Chapter 16 -- A Woman Studies War : Stranger in a Man's World; Part V; Chapter 17 -- Making Whole : Method and Ethics in Mainstream and Narrative Psychology; Chapter 18 -- Ethics and Narratives; About the Contributors N2 - First-hand accounts of the ideological, moral, emotional and practical complexities that surround the doing of narrative research are offered in this volume. Exploring such issues as: whether work that risks exposing sensitive aspects of peoples' lives can ever be fully ethical; what effect being written about has on people; the line between narrative research and psychotherapy; and the after-effects of this research on the researcher, the contributions reveal the struggles and anxieties that narrative researchers face ER -