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Humanitarian nursing with Médecins Sans Frontières: Foregrounding the listening guide as a method for analysing oral history data
Author(s) -
Golding Berenice,
Hargreaves Janet
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/jan.13585
Subject(s) - foregrounding , active listening , narrative , context (archaeology) , thematic analysis , oral history , psychology , sociology , qualitative research , history , social science , literature , art , anthropology , psychotherapist , archaeology
Aims To demonstrate how the listening guide contributed to oral history data analysis. To better understand the continuing inclination of nurses to engage in humanitarian work, foregrounding the nurses’ lives. Background The voice‐centred relational method or listening guide is a method of qualitative data analysis used to analyse oral history data. Design A conventional approach to oral history interviews was adopted; intervention into the “flow” of participants’ narrative was kept to a minimum. A small number of prompts, how they came into nursing, recruitment to, life with and since Médecins Sans Frontières, were used. Methods Oral history interviews were conducted with seven nurses who had worked for Médecins Sans Frontières. Interviews were digitally recorded. This paper will demonstrate the application of the listening guide to historical data analysis and critique its applicability and value. The listening guide advocates four readings (listenings) of the text. Firstly, locating the plot in the narrative; secondly, actively listening for the use of “I?” (“we”, or “you”), the “self” in context of the story being told and “I poem” development; thirdly, listening for relationships and finally, locating accounts in relation to wider social, political and societal contexts. Results Analysis revealed: “becoming”, “being” and “leaving” Médecins Sans Frontières as chronological thematic areas. At one extreme creating “I poems” foregrounded individual voices while cross‐referencing to contemporaneous records of world events locates this in an International context. Conclusion It is argued that subjecting historical data to the listening guide can enable legitimate, creative exploration and analysis of data.