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The Myth of Silent Authorship: Self, Substance, and Style in Ethnographic Writing
Author(s) -
Charmaz Kathy,
Mitchell Richard G.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
symbolic interaction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.874
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1533-8665
pISSN - 0195-6086
DOI - 10.1525/si.1996.19.4.285
Subject(s) - storytelling , deference , style (visual arts) , ethnography , meaning (existential) , sociology , discipline , psychology , foundation (evidence) , writing style , aesthetics , linguistics , social psychology , narrative , literature , art , history , anthropology , social science , philosophy , archaeology , psychotherapist
Voice, the animus of storytelling, the author's presence in written works, concerns both sides of the modernist fence. Authors are urged to restrain and regulate their voices in deference to disciplinary expectations. We advocate developing an audible writer's voice that reflects our empirical experiences. Voice ranges from the evocative to the analytic and varies according to: (a) the freshness of the inquiry, (b) relationships with respondents, and (c) the place of the studied phenomena in larger systems of meaning and practice. Two different examples of our writing illustrate how fieldwork influenced the emergence of evocative and analytic voices.

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