You are on page 1of 21

Handbook of

INTERVIEW
RESEARCH
Context &Method

Editors

J~~rJl1Q!lbrium JamesA~!!~l~!~m

A SAGE ReferenceTItle '2002-


@
_
,~
lIIisagepUblications
International Educational and Professional Publisher
Thousand Oaks .. London" New Delhi
FE STORY INTERVIEW

stories of our lives is so ba- that can be represented as separation~ tran-


nature that we are largely sition, incorporation (van Gennep 1960),
~a~~ti~ of its importance. We think birth, death, rebirth (Eliade 1954), or as de-
speak in story form, and parture, lDltlatlOn, return (Campbell
to our lives through stories. 1968). This pattern is like a blueprint, or an
are telling stories about original form, within which the story com-
their lives to friends and municates a balance between opposing
forces. The pattern actually forms the basis
universal themes or mo- for the plot of a story and aids the story-
variations of one of the teller in remembering the elements of a
myths, or legends story while keeping the story on the course-
to us for generations of on which it is meant to be.
(see Narayan and George, The stories we tell of our own lives today
volume). Stories connect are still guided by the same patterns and en-
during elements. Our lives unfold accord-
communities of the past, ing to an innate blueprint, following the
a central role in the lives of pattern of beginning, muddle, and resolu-
was through story that the tion~ with many repetitions of this pattern.
of life were transmitted. Our lives consist of a series of events and
generation to generation circumstances that are drawn from a well of
values as well as lessons archetypal experiences common to all
,;;;;~I~jJ'&~~J~l?~;lt{i::,.~~;~
>_
Traditional stories
and universal pattern
other human beings. It is within this ageless
and universal context that we can best be-

• 121
122 • FORJvfS OF INTERVIEWING

gin to understand the importance and and shape the individual to the require-
power of the life story interview and how it ments of the society. Stories help us under-
is fundamental to our very nature. stand our commonalities and bonds with
Storytelling is in our blood. We are the others as well as our differences. Stories
storytelling species. Stories were once the foster a sense of community.
center of community life. We are recognjz- Third, stories can serve a mystical-
ing more readily now that there is some- religious function, by bringing us face-to-
thing of the gods and goddesses inside us, in face with an ultimate mystery. Stories
the stories we tell of our own lives. Life sto- awaken feelings of awe, wonder, humility,
rytelling gives us direction, validates our respect, and gratitude in recognition of the
own experience, restores value to living, mysteries around us. These feelings help us
and strengthens community bonds. participate in the mystery of being. Stories
The reasons we tell OUf stories today can take us beyond the here and now, beyond
be traced to the original functions of the our everyday existence, and allow us to en-
earliest known stories. Myths and folkt~les ter the realm of the spirit, the domain of
have traditionally served four classic func- the sacred.
tions, bringing us into accord with our- And finally, stories can render a cosmol-
selves, with others, with the mystery of life, ogy, an interpretive total image of the uni-
and with the universe around us (Campbell verse that is in accord with the knowledge
1970). A living mythology contains sym- of the time, a worldview that makes sense
bols, motifs, and archetypes that speak to of the natural workings of the universe
us on a fundamentally human level; they re- around us. Stories help us to understand the
verberate beyond the personal and into the universe of which we are a part, and how
collective realm. They carry a power that we fit into it.
connects with that deepest part of our- When our life stories are told in a way
selves. Sacred, or traditional, stories touch that follows this ageless pattern of transfor-
a center of life that we all have within us. mation, they can carry the power and force
Life stories, too, serve the same classic of living myth for us and our listeners, by
functions, by carrying the timeless themes bringing about insights, sentiments, and
and motifs found in a living mythology into commitments that can result in a new level
out own lives. As we tell our life stories, of maturity, new responsibilities, and possi-
ageless themes and motifs emerge that link bly even a new status. We seem to be recog-
us to our ancestors. Life stories serve these nizing more now that everyone has a story,
classic functions in four distinct realms. even many, to tell about his or her life, and
First, stories, with their deeply human ele- that the stories we have to tell are indeed
ments and motifs, can guide uS psychologi- important (Atkinson 1995, 1998; Kenyon
cally, stage by stage, through the entire life and Randall 1997; Randall 1995; Gubrium
course. They foster an unfolding of the self and Holstein 1998).
and help us to center and integrate our-
selves by gaining a clearer understanding of
our experiences, our feelings about them,
and their meaning for us. The stories we tell • Development of Inte1'est
of our lives bring order to our experiences in the Life St01'Y
and help us to view our lives both subjec-
tively and objectively at the same time
while assisting us in forming our identities. People in many academic disciplines have
Second, stories can affirm, validate, and been interviewing others for their life sto-
support our own experiences socially and ries for longer than we often recognize. As
clarify our relationships to those around us. far as I can determine, and as I use the term
They enforce the norms of a moral order here, the life story interview has evolved
The Life Story Interview • 123

from oral history, life history, and other core of self-formation, whereas Jerome
ethnographic and field approaches. Life Bruner (1986) employs narrative as an im-
story interviewing is a qualitative research portant means for discovering how we
method for gathering information on the "construct" our lives. The narrative study
subjective essence of one person's entire of lives, as presented in a series of books ed-
life that is transferable across disciplines. ited by Ruthellen J osselson and Amia
As a method of looking arlife as a whole, Lieblich (1993, 1995, 1999; Josselson
and as a way of carrying out in-depth study 1996; Lieblich and Josselson 1994, 1997),
of individual lives, the life story interview aims to further the theoretical understand-
stands alone. It has become a central ele- ing of individual life narratives through
ment of the burgeoning subfield of the nar- in-depth studies, methodological examina-
rative study of lives (Cohler 1988; tions, and theoretical explorations.
Josselson and Lieblich 1993), for its inter- The life history has long been a primary
disciplinary applications in understanding methodology of anthropological field work.
single lives in detail IIDd how the individual As James Spradley (1979) points out, some
plays various roles in society (Cohler 1993; life histories are heavily edited by the eth-
Gergen and Gergen 1993). nographer (often only 60 percent of the de-
The use of life narratives for serious aca- scription is actually in the insider's own
demic study is considered to have begun in words or language), whereas others are
psychology with Sigmund Freud's (1957, presented in the same form in which they
1958) psychoanalytic interpretation of in- were recorded. The life history interview
dividual case studies, although these were and the life story interview are very similar
based on secondary documents. Freud used in their approaches and what they cover,
these narratives primarily in applying his but the specific information sought and fi-
psychoanalytic theory to individual lives. nal products can be very different. In folk-
Gordon Allport (1942) used personal doc- lore, the term life story is used much as life
uments to study personality development history is in anthropology, with the focus
in individuals, focusing on primary docu- usually being on the role of the interviewee
ments, including narratives, while also con- in the community as a tradition bearer (see
sidering the problems of reliability and va- Titon 1980; Ives 1986).
lidity of interpretation associated with Because of the broad interdisciplinary
using such materials. This method reached use of the life story, as well as the particular
its maturation in Erik Erikson's (1958, approach of each interviewer or researcher,
1969) studies of Luther and Gandhi. the final forms of life stories can vary
Erikson (1975) also used the life history to greatly. On the one hand, a life story can
explore how the historical moment influ- read as mostly the researcher's own de-
ences lives. scription of what was said, done, or inti-
Henry Murray (1938,1955) was one of mated. On the other, it can be a 100 percent
the first to study individual lives using life first-person narrative in the words of the
narratives primarily to understand person- person interviewed.
ality development. The recent interest in As a research tool that is gaining much
story on the part of personality psycholo-
interest and use in many disciplines to-
gists, other social scientists, and scholars in day, the life story interview is employed by
diverse disciplines reflects the broader in-
researchers who take two primary ap-
terest in narrative as it serves to illuminate
proaches: the constructionist and the nat-
the lives of persons in society. Theodore
uralistic. Some narrative researchers con-
Sarbin (1986) uses narrative for under-
standing human experience, identifying it
a
ceive of the life story as circumstantially
mediated, constructive collaboration be-
as the "root metaphor" and placing it at the
tween the interviewer and interviewee.
124 • FORMS OF INTERVIEWING

This approach stresses the situated emer- of the stories they tell. It is through their
gence of the life story as opposed to the sub- construction of their realities, and the sto-
jectively faithful, experientially oriented ries they tell about those realities, that we,
account. In the constructionist perspective, as researchers, learn what we want to from
life stories are evaluated not so much for them.
how well they accord with the life experi- Since creating the Center for the Study
ences in question, but more in terms of how of Lives at the University of Southern
accounts of lives are llsed by a variety of Maine in 1988, I have tried to merge all
others, in addition to the subjects whose these interests, not only in building bridges
lives are under consideration, for various across disciplines but in building a growing
descriptive purposes (see Gubrium and archive of life stories, currently numbering
Holstein 1998; Holstein and Gubrium over 500, to offer researchers with various
2000a,2000b). purposes and interests a unique database.
My own approach to the life story, Most of the life stories in the archive were
which is based in a naturalistic, person- gathered by my graduate students for class
centered view, has evolved from an inter- projects designed for them to learn as much
disciplinary context, beginning more than as possible about how one person views his
30 years ago with my graduate study of or her own development over time and
folklore, when I interviewed an elder tradi- across the life cycle. The life stories in the
tion bearer for his life story. I went on to archives are available to all researchers for
pursue a second master's degree in counsel- secondary analysis and can be searched by
ing, and I began to see the power not only in topics or by categories on the cover sheets.
telling but in retelling, or composing and I believe that there is much in each life
recomposing, recasting and reframing, one's story to identify the unique ~alue and
own story, and especially in getting to one's worth of each life, and that there are many
deeper or larger story. In my doctoral work, common elements, motifs, and issues that
which focused on cross-cultural human de- all life stories express, indeed that we all
velopment, I further expanded this interest share as human beings, along with some
by using the life story interview to explore differences that exist. As an example of
how cultural values and traditions influ- how I have used life stories, I have looked
ence development across the life cycle. for important life themes that emerge in a
I have felt that it is important, in trying person's telling of his Dr her story. These
to understand other persons' experiences might explain coherence, how and why the
in life or their relations to others, to let story holds together, even if it also contains
their voices be heard, to let them speak for disruptions. Life themes also highlight im-
and about themselves first. If we want to portant influences and relationships. In a
know the unique perspective of an individ- small group of life story interviews with eI-
ual, there is no better way to get this than in ders, I looked for the life-as-a-whole per-
that person's own voice. I am also inter- spective and explored how the themes of
ested in having the person tell his Dr her continuity, purpose, commitment, and
story from the vantage point that allows the meaning were expressed in their lives
individual to see his Dr her life as a whole, (Atkinson 1985).
to see it subjectively across time as it all fits Life stories have gained respect and ac-
together, or as it seems discontinuous, or ceptance in many academic circles. Psy-
both. It is, after all, this subjective perspec- chologists see the value of personal narra-
tive that tells us what we are looking for in tives for understanding development and
all our research efforts. This is what consti- personality (Runyan 1982; McAdams
tutes the individual's reality of his or her 1993). Anthropologists use the life history,
world. Storytellers are the first interpreters Dr individual case study, as the preferred

i
----------------------------------------------------------~---=,~~~
The Life Story Interview • 125

unit of study for their measures of cultural .. Defining a Life Story


similarities and variations (Spradley 1979;
Langness and. Frank 1981; Abu-Lughod
1993). Sociologists use life stories to under- An individual life and the role it plays in the
stand and 'define relationships and group larger community are best understood
interactions and memberships (Bertaux through story. We become fully aware, fully
1981; Linde 1993). In education, life sto- conscious, of our own lives through the
ries have been used as a new way of know- process of putting them together in story
ing and teaching (Witherell & Noddings form. It is through story that we gain con-
1991). Literary scholars use autobiogra- text and recognize meaning. Reclaiming
phies as texts through which to explore story is part of our birthright. Telling our
questions of design, style, content, literary stories enables us to be heard, recognized,
themes, and personal truth (Olney 1980). and acknowledged by others. Telling a life
Historians find in using the oral history ap- story makes the implicit explicit, the hid-
proach that life story materials are an im- den seen, the unformed formed, and the
portant source for enhancing local history confusing clear.
(Allen and Montell 1981). A life story is the story a person chooses
The movement toward life stories, to tell about the life he or she has lived, told
where we tell our own stories in our own as completely and honestly as possible,
words, is a movement toward acknowledg- what the person remembers of it and what
ing personal truth from the subjective point he or she wants others to know of it, usually
of view as well as a movement toward the as a result of a guided interview by another.
validity of narrative. A life story narrative The resulting life story is the narrative es-
highlights the most important influences, sence of what has happened to the person.
experiences, circumstances, issues, themes, It can cover the time from birth to the pres-
and lessons of a lifetime. As such, a life ent or before and beyond. It includes the
story narrative can be both a valuable expe- important events, experiences, and feelings
rience for the person telling the story and a of a lifetime.
successful research endeavor for the one There is very little difference between a
gathering the data. life story and a life history. The two terms
This movement is championed by are often used interchangeably. The differ-
Bruner (1986,1987,1990,1991), a cogni- ence between a life story and an oral history
tive psychologist who has illustrated that is usually emphasis and scope. An oral his-
we actually construct personal meaning tory most often focuses on a specific aspect
(and reality) during the making and telling of a person's life, such as work life or a spe-
of our narratives, that our own experiences cial role in some part of the life of a commu-
take the form of the narratives we use to tell nity. An oral history most often focuses on
about them. According to Bruner, stories the community or on what someone re-
are our way of organizing, il}terpreting, members about a specific historical event,
and creating meaning from our experiences issue, time, or place (see Candida Smith,
while maintaining a sense of continuity Chapter 34, this volume). When an oral in-
through it all. A promising direction is ger- terview focuses on a person's entire life, it is
ontologist James Birren's continuing use of usually referred to as a life story or life his-
"guided autobiography" as a source of psy- tory.
chological and social science research (see A life story can take a factual form, a
Birren and Birren 1996). Guided autobiog- metaphorical form, a poetic form, or any
raphy is the relating of a life by the one who other creatively expressive form. What is
has experienced it, but with the assistance important is thar the life story be told in rhe
of an experienced storyteller or writer (see form, shape, and style that is most comfort-
Kenyon, Clark, and de Vries 2001). able to the person telling it. Whatever form
126 • FOR.tV!S OF INTERVIEWING

it takes, a life story always brings order and that can be done to help a storyteller to de-
meaning to the life being told, for both the velop a more fully told, feeling-based story;
teller and the listener. It is a way to under- in other cases a recitation of facts may be all
stand the past and the present more fully, an interviewer will be able to get.
and a way to leave a personal legacy for the At other times, the teller may present a
future. conjured, fabticated, or strategic story. If
A life story is a fairly complete narrative this happens, the interviewer need not run
of an individual's enrire experience of life out for a lie detector; it may be that this
as a whole, highlighting the most important type of story will also serve his or her re-
aspects. A life story gives us a vantage point search interests. The researcher could ask,
from which to see how one person experi- and include some interpretation about,
ences and understands life, his or her own why the individual chose a fabricated
especially, over time. It enables us to see story-that is, what purpose this served for
and identify threads and links that connect the storyteller.
one part of a person's life to another, that A researcher may also use corrobo-
connect childhood to adulthood. of
rators, or seek indicators internal consis-
Life stories are told on many occasions. tency. It may be that the researcher can use
We are in fact continually telling others whatever story an interviewee tells to ac-
who we are and what we are about. complish the research goals, finding an in-
Through the daily chores of life, and ar ev- terpretation that will be useful. The point
ery stage of life, we share pieces of our- of the life story interview is to give the per-
selves with those we come in contact with. son interviewed the opportunity to tell his
Whether it is the solitary, social, or dra- or her story in the way that person chooses
matic play of childhood, a rite of passage of to tell it. Coherence and honesty can be
adolescence, a wedding, or a retirement part of the collaborative process, if neces-
banquet, we are continually telling epi- sary, but achieving this will depend on how
sodes and chapters of our life stories, both open the storyteller is to coherence and
as we live them and as we relive them in our honesty in the first place.
everyday actions, behaviors, creations, and
the words we speak about them.
We keep memories, experiences, and
collective values alive by telling others • Benefits and Uses of
about them or putting them in a form that
may last longer than ourselves. In a life
the Life St01'Y Interview
story interview, the interviewee is a story-
teller, the narrator of the story of his or her
own life; the interviewer is a guide, or di- It is impossible to anticipate what a life
rector, in this process. The two together are story interview will be like-not so much
collaborators, composing and constructing rhe form it will take, but the power of the
a story the teller can be pleased with. experience itself. I have found this to be the
As collaborator in an open-ended pro- case over and over, as have my students,
cess, the researcher/guide is never really in who have reported how meaningful it has
control of the story actually told. The pro- been for them to have done particular inter-
cess may not always go as smoothly as views, especially those with individuals
boped. The person asked to tell his or her they were already close to, such as parents
story may be brief, unembellishing, and un- or spouses. Just witnessing-really hearing,
emotional in the telling. This could result in understanding, and accepting, without
a short listing of factual events thar have oc- judgment-another's life story can be
curred. In some cases there may be more transforming (Birren and Birren 1996).
The Life Story Interview +' 127

PERSONAL BENEFITS !Ill when he was thirteen years old opened


II up a crack, and I was allowed to peek in
~~
A woman who had just completed a life ~ and see illy father from the inside out-
story interview with her father said, "There I! and I am thankful for this.
was no way I could have prepared for the
emotional impact this experience had on
There may be no equal to the life story
me." She was completely overwhelmed by
interview for revealing the inner life of a
what she had learned about her father and
person. Historical reconstruction may not
later described having a great deal of "emo-
be the primary concern in life stories;
tional residue" from that experience with
rather, it may be how the individuals see
him. Mter I read her father's life story, with
themselves at given points in their lives, and
all of the details of his having been raised
how they want others to see them. Life sto-
during the Depression by a single mother as
ries offer glimpses of the sometimes hidden
one of four children in poverty and with
human qualities and characteristics that
constant uprooting, of having witnessed
make us all so fascinating, and fun to listen
the frontline horrors of World War II, and
to.
of struggling to enter the postwar working
I have found that the vast majority of
world with a grade school education, I
people really want to share their life stories.
thought I knew what she meant.
All that most people usually need is some-
Another woman interviewed her father
one to listen, or someone to show a sincere
and had a similar experience. She later
interest in their stories, and they welcome
wrote:
being interviewed. Even those who may be
reluctant to be interviewed because they
Sitting with my father for three hours
feel intimidated, embarrassed, ashamed, or
listening to his life story was a wonder-
simply unsure about it or uncomfortable
ful experience for both of us. Our rela-
with it (see Adler and Adler, Chapter 25,
tionship has not been one of sharing
this volume) may be persuaded by the many
feelings and innermost thoughts. I've
valuable personal benefits that can come
always felt that he loves me, although
with sharing their life stories, if they can
he has seldom shown his love through
overcome their unwillingness:
words or behavior. What started out to
be a slightly uncomfortable experience
for both of us ended up being a very 1. In sharing our stories, we gain a clearer
special time. It was like we had both perspective on personal experiences and
been lifted out of our worlds and placed feelings, which in turn brings greater
in this room together. Of course, I meaning to our lives.
would have liked to hear more about
2. Through sharing our stories, we obtain
how he felt about different life events,
greater self-knowledge, stronger self-image,
but I know that he shared more with me
and enhanced self-esteem.
that day than he had in my entire life-
time. At the end of our three hours to- 3. In sharing our stories, we share cherished
gether we hugged each other. I told him experiences and insights with others.
that I loved him and was glad he was my
4. Sharing our stories can bring us joy, saris-
father. He told me that he loved me and
faction, and inner peace.
was glad that I was his daughter. Our
eyes both filled up and then this special 5. Sharing our stories is a way of purging, or
time ended, although the effects of this releasing, certain burdens and validating
time together will stay with us. That personal experience; this is in fact central
door within him that was slammed shut to the recovery process.
128 • FORNIS OF INTERVIEWING

6. Sharing our stories helps create commu- nation of the self-narrative process, the re-
nity, and may show us that we have more searcher can secure useful information and
in common with others than we thought. come to the desired understanding of the
self as a meaning maker with a place in soci-
7. By sharing our stories, we can help other
ety, the cultnre, and history (Freeman
people see their lives more clearly or dif-
1992). Telling a life story can be one of the
ferently, and perhaps inspire them to
most emphatic ways to answer the ques-
change negative things in their lives.
tion, "Who am I?" The researcher can de-
8. When we share our stories, others will get termine if the story tells who the person re-
to know and understand us better, in ways ally is, if there is a felt unity of experiences
that they hadn't before. in the story told, how identity is defined,
9. In sharing our stories, we might gain a
whether this is internally and externally
better sense of how we want our stories to
consistent, and how these match with iden-
end, or how we can give ourselves the
tity-formation models (Widdershoven
"good" endings we want. By understand- 1993; Kroger 1993; Erikson 1963; Marcia
ing our past and present, we derive a
1966).
dearer perspective on OUf goals for the fu- Telling a life story is not therapy, but the
ture, act of telling the story can often help clarify
things for the teller that he or she might not
have understood before, as noted earlier.
Not everyone will experience the life Aiter all, psychotherapy is known as the
story interview exactly in the same way, of "talking cure." In therapy, individuals tell
course. Some may look back on certain their stories to professionals who are
parts of their lives with regret, and for some
trained to help them understand, interpret,
the interview can be a painful process. But and learn from their stories better than they
even this kind of reaction can have eventual
could on their own. The narrative ap-
positive outcomes.
proach, when used by therapists or coun-
selors as a guided means for assisting clients
to get to the details of their lives, is a pro-
RESEARCH USES cess of "storying" andlor "restorying"
(White & Epston 1990), or creating new
The life story interview is inherently in- and possibly liberating narratives (see
terdisciplinary; its many research uses di- Mill er, de Shazer, and De Jong, Chapter 19,
rectly parallel the four classic functions of this volume).
sacred stories. The life story interview can The life story interview is also one of the
help the teller, the listener, the reader, most helpful psychological research ap-
and the scholar to understand a broad range proaches available to enable researchers to
of psychological, sociological, mystical- gain a subjective perspective on and under-
religious, and cosmological-philosophical standing of the broad scope of topics or is-
Issues. sues that individuals experience. In telling
As for psychological uses, the remem- their life stories, individuals follow a natu-
bering, shaping, and sharing of a life story ral tendency of arranging the events and
can be a valuable text for learning about the circumstances of their lives in ways that
human endeavor. There are many domains give those events a coherent order (Cohler
within psychology where the life story can 1988). The book series The Narrative Study
be a helpful research tool. The life story of Lives, which explores questions of how
narrative may be the most effective means we construct and make sense of our lives
for gaining an understanding of how the through narrative, 1S essential reading for
self evolves over time. Through an exami- any researcher using life stories Uosselson
The Life Story Interview • 129

and Lieblich 1993, 1995, 1999; Lieblich life, anthropologists regularly use life sto-
and Josselson 1994, 1997; Josselson ries to get at shared cultural meanings, the
1996). insider's view of a community, and the dy-
The results of life story interviews also namics of cultural change (Geertz 1973;
have sociological uses. Life stories can help Langness & Frank 1981). Folklorists know
the researcher become more aware of the that life stories are the repositories of tradi-
range of possible roles and standards that tionallore, beliefs, customs, and practices,
exist within a human community. They can and that they can answer many questions
define an individual's place in the social or- about the process of keeping traditions
der of things and can explain or confirm ex- alive (Titan 1980; Ives 1986).
perience through the moral, ethical, or so- As far as cosmological-philosophical is-
cial context of a given situation. They can sues are concerned, it is very likely that
provide the researcher with information each life story will contain a personal
about a social reality existing outside the worldview, a personal philosophy, a per-
story that is described by the story (Bertaux sonal value system, and a personal ideol-
1981). They also can help explain the story ogy, as well as views on what is morally, if
itself as a social construct (Rosenthal 1993) not politically, correct, how life is to be
as well as help explain an individual's un- lived, and so all. Researchers could explore
derstanding of social events, movements, how life stories told currently fit with what
and political causes, or how individual we know of the universe today, or how peo-
members of a group, generation, or cohort ple make sense of the world we now live in,
see certain events or movements (Stewart or the "thickness" of connections across
1994). time, or the personal vision or interpreta-
The stories people tell about their lives tion of what life and reality is about for the
all contain discourse units, degrees of co- person (Brockelman 1985).
herence, and an overall linguistic structure. The research applications of the life
All of these are useful to researchers inter- story interview are limitless. In any field,
ested in determining the relation between the life story itself could serve as the center-
language and social practice, the relation of piece for published research, or segments
self to others, and the creation of social could be used as data to illustrate any num-
identity (Linde 1993; Mkhonza 1995). ber of research needs. The life story inter-
Regarding mystical-religious issues, life view allows for rhe gathering of more data
stories can provide clues to what people's than a researcher may actually use, which is
greatest struggles and triumphs are, where good practice and provides a broad founda-
their deepest values lie, what their quests tion of information to draw upon. The life
have been, where they might have been story approach can be used within the disci-
broken, and where they have been made plines already mentioned, as well as for the
whole again. Life stories portray religion examination of many substantive issues, as
and spirituality as lived experience. Re- the following few examples illustrate.
searchers can ask specific questions of a Narratives are being given a central
story, such as, What beliefs, or worldview, place in the search for fresh approaches to
are expressed in the story? Is the transcen- knowing and teaching. The life stories of
dent expressed? In what way does commu- educators can tell researchers how those in-
nity playa role in the life lived deeply? How dividuals have found their own centers
does this spiritual autobiography compare through their chosen work; they can illus-
to the lives of the classic spiritual leaders trate the primacy, in both individual lives
(Comstock 1995)? and educational practice, of the quest for
Addressing questions of beliefs, values, life's meaning and the role of caring for
customs, sacred traditions, and meaning in persons (Witherell and Noddings 1991).
130 • FORMS OF INTERVIEWING

Life stories are central to human devel- hear the life stories of individuals from
opment, interactions between generations, underrepresented groups, to help establish
and integrity in late life. It is now com- a balance in the literature and expand the
monly recognized in gerontology that a pri- options for us all au the cultural level. Life
mary developmental task for elders is the stories of gay men and lesbians would also
"life review" (Butler 1963). This is, in ef- contribute to a more complete understand-
fect, the process of remembering and ex- ing of the issues related to change in peo-
pressing the experiences, struggles, lessons, ple's lives (Boxer and Cohler 1989; Ben-AIi
and wisdom of a lifetime, which can be of 1995).
great value to the researcher. It was the role
of elders to pass on their values and wisdom
through their stories long before Robert
Butler (1963) described the life review pro- • The Art and Science of
cess and referred to it as the "elder func- Life Story Interviewing
tion."
When the life review is purposeful and
not a passive, fragmentary flickering of im- Although a fairly uniform research meth-
ages from the past, the result can be trans- odology can be applied and many impor-
forming. Telling a life story, at any age, with tant data can be gathered from a life story,
much, reflection, can help a person to clar- there may be more subjectivity, even
ify his or her "ultimate concerns" before it chance, involved in doing a life story inter-
is too late (Tillich 1957; Erikson 1964). view than common standards of objectivity
The life stories of elders can provide re- would lead one to expect. The same re-
searchers with much significant informa- searcher may use different questions with
tion about the life course, the sequence of different interviewees, based on a number
generations, our understanding of aging, of variables, and still end up with a fairly
and the role of stories across the life cycle, complete life story of each person being in-
and can help us to determine ways to im- terviewed. Different interviewers may also
prove the quality of life (Birren et a!. 1996). use different questions, depending on the
To balance out the databases researchers particular foci of their projects. The life
have relied upon for so long in generating story interview is essentially a template that
theory, more life stories of women and will be applied differently in different situa-
members of culturally diverse groups need tions, circumstances, and settings.
to be recorded. We need to give the femi- For example, in The Life Story Interview
nine voice more opportunities to be heard, (Atkinson 1998), I suggest more than 200
analyzed, and theorized about, at least to questions an interviewer can ask in obtain-
see if there might be a female equivalent to ing a life story. These questions are not
the monomyth (Campbell 1968), so that re- meant to be used in their entirety or as a
searchers will be able to determine more ef- structure that is in any way set in stone.
fectively the similarities and differences be- They are merely suggested questions, and
tween the male and female experience, and only the most appropriate few need be used
to seek a synthesis that would expand life for each person interviewed. There are
story options for all and benefit both gen- times when a researcher might use a hand-
ders (Gergen and Gergen 1993). There is a ful of these questions and other times when
wide range of uses and applications of nar- he or she might ask two or three dozen of
rative knowing in relation to gender issues them. From case to case, it is very likely that
(see especially Helle 1991; Lieblich and an interviewer will choose different sets of
Josselson 1994). For similar reasons, be- questions. The key to getting the best inter-
cause how we tell our stories is mediated by view is for the interviewer to be flexible and
our cultures Qosselson 1995), we need to able to adapt to specific circumstances.
The Life Story Interview • 131

There may be cases in which an interviewer and how a life story can be beneficial. Sec-
will ask questions that are not on the list of ond is the process of doing the interview
those offered at all, when someone's life ex- itself, guiding a person through the telling
perience is best expressed or understood in of his or her life story while recording it on
an entirely different context than the stan- audio- or videotape. Third are the pro-
dard domains of life. cesses of transcribing and interpreting the
In my view, the life story interview can interview material.
be approached scientifically, but it is best Because my own orientation is to the
carried out as an art. Although there may be person telling the story, my inclination in
a structure (a set of questions, or parts transcribing narrative material is to leave
thereof) that can be used, each interviewer the interviewer's questions and comments,
will apply this in his or her own way. Al- as well as repetitions, out of the transcript,
though theories may come into play to a so that it becomes a flowing, connected
varying degree throughout the process, the narrative in the respondent'S own words. I
interview and the interpretation of it are might then give the transcribed life story to
highly subjective. Further, just as there are the person to review and check over for any
good and better artists, there are good and changes he or she might want to make in it,
better interviewers. The execution of the thus responding to the life story in the form
interview, whether structured or not, will of a subjective reaction or validity check.
vary from one interviewer to another. The Still, the broader question of what to tran-
particular interviewee is another important scribe remains debatable, an issue I will re-
factor. Life storytellers offer highly per- turn to in the next section.
sonal meanings, memories, and interpreta- What we end up with is a flowing life
tions of their own, adding to the artful con- story in the words of the person telling it.
tours of their life stories. The only editing necessary would be to de-
Because life story interviewing itself is lete repetitions or other completely extra-
primarily an artful endeavor, the resulting neous information. It may be that some re-
interviews should be interpreted as an art ordering of content will add to the clariry
form. The life story interview has its own or readability of the story. If one does such
standards of reliability and validity that are reordering, the greatest advantage to the
distinct from quantitative research meth- life story approach comes into play, which
ods. Qualitative research (including life is that one can still consult the person
story interviews) can be determined to be whose story it is and give him or her the fi-
reliable or valid on its own merits. As works nal say in what the life story will look like in
of art have their own standards of judg- its completed form, given that it is that per-
ment, so too do research methods based son's story that is being told. The life story-
primarily on subjectivity, flexibility, and in- teller can also address the internal consis-
evitable human variables. A life story is first tency issue; that is, does the way things
and foremost a text, to be read, under- seem to be connected in narrative form
stood, and interpreted on its own merit and make sense to him or her? The person tell-
in its own way. ing the life story should always have the last
word in how his or her story is presented in
written form before it gets passed on to oth-
THE PROCESS OF LIFE ers or is published.
STORY INTERVIEWING Life story interviews can vary consider-
ably in length. Sometimes restrictive cir-
A life story interview unfolds in three cumstances prevail and an interview may
stages. First is the planning or preinterview be limited to an hour or less. This is far
stage, which includes preparing for the in- from the ideal. For example, I have had to
terview and, especially, understanding why conduct a few life story interviews under
132 • FORM.S OF !l\'TERVIEWING

such conditions, when interviewees were • Issues and Challenges


away from home and had other obligations
at the time. In each case I had to revise my
usual approach and carry out the interview The life story interview is a highly contex-
looking primarily for the essence, or high-
tualized, highly personalized approach to
lights, of the person's life, still trying to
the gathering of qualitative information
have the person include something from about the human experience. It demands
each stage of life. In such circumstances, a
many spontaneous, individual judgments
researcher may be able to get more in-depth on the part of the interviewer while the in-
life stories by sending transcripts of the terview ·is in progress. Its direction can be
interviews to the persons to see if they want
determined on the spur of the moment by
to add anything. Usually such additions can unexpected responses to questions, or by
be done by mail, if there is a problem of the way a life is given its particular narrative
distance, but this again is not ideal; face-
structure. The quest in a life story interview
to-face involvement is always preferred.
is for the unique voice and experience of
More typical of the kind of life story in-
the storyteller, which is morally implicative
terviewing being described here is a series and may also merge at some points with the
of at least two or three interviews with the
universal human experience. As such, a
person, each an hour to an hour and a half number of important related issues need to
in duration. Even this may be considered
be considered.
brief, hut it is quite a bit longer than the
one-time interview, and much can be
learned about a person's life in a tvvo- or
three-part interview that extends over ETHICAL AND
three hours. This is the length of interview I CONCEPTUAL ISSUES
recommend for students especially, as it
provides them with more than enough in- Because those of us who conduct life
formation to gain a good understanding of story interviews are asking real people to
whatever they are seeking for purposes of a tell us their true stories, and because we are
course. With the transcription time in- attempting to assist and collaborate with
volved, it is also about all they can manage them in this process and then take their sto-
within the time constraints of a course. ries to a larger audience, we have to ask
Some life story interviews can go on for ourselves and be able to answer satisfacto-
nyo or three dozen hours. Interviews of this rily several questions concerning ethical is-
length are typical of full-length assisted au- sues, including the following: How can we
tobiography. I have done a life story inter- reconcile the benefits of the life story to our
view of more than 40 hours for the purpose interviewees with the benefits to our re-
of writing an assisted autobiography with search agenda? How do we make SUfe that
Babatunde Olatunji, the Mrican drummer. we maintain consistency between our origi-
The interviews took place over a three-year nal intention and the final product, and
period, as we were able to fit our meetings that this is clear all the way through? These
into our respective schedules and to allow afe not easy questions to answer, especially
time for transcriptions and going over each if we ask people for their stories and then
section or chapter. Other longer life histo- write only about them, not using their own
ries, such as Carl Klockars's (1974) study of words to tell their stories (Josselson 1996).
a professional fence, can require closer to The issue centers on the uneasy relation-
100 hours. An average-length life story in- ship between the personal and the research
terview, however, is more in the range of relevance of life stories, especially as story
three to five hours, consisting of many sit- details are likely to be taken beyond the
tings. purview of the respondents,
The Life Story Interview .. 133

This leads to an important conceptual is- "Why am I?" question, or what those things
sue, that of voice. If you ask someone to tell mean to me (de Vries & Lehman 1996).
his or her life story, will what you get be in Each life story is complex in its own way,
that person's authentic voice, or in a voice and each tells us something about the pat-
that he or she thinks you might be looking terns, perceptions, and processes that con-
for? The type or quality of the relationship tribute to our understanding of lives across
between interviewer and interviewee may time.
have something to do with what you get. A
relationship in which a power differential is
part of the equation mayor may not affect INTERPRETIVE CHALLENGES
the voice the story is told in. If the power
factor puts the interviewee in a vulnerable This brings us to the interpretation of
position, that could affect not only the the life story. There are two steps in the
voice the story is told in, but the impact tell- postinterview stage of life story interview-
ing it has on the one doing the telling (see ing: transcription and interpretation. This
Briggs, Chapter 44, this volume). If the re- is the point at which the researcher applies
spondent has found his or her own voice, the interview itself, or the information
knows what it is, and is used to using that gained from it, effectively and efficiently to
voice, it is hard to imagine· that a certain achieve his or her _original research goals.
changeable circumstance would alter or in- The ultimate aim of the narrative investiga-
fluence the voice that person uses to tell his tion of human life, which applies to life sto-
or her story. My own experience shows that ries as well, is the interpretation of experi-
people tend to want to tell their stories the ence Uosselson and Lieblich 1995). This is
way they happened, in their own voices as a complex matter because both interpreta-
best they know how, regardless of who is tion and experience are highly relative
asking what questions. A related issue here terms. Subjectivity is at the center of the
is consistency. If people are aware of, and process of life storytelling. This involves
accept, their own stories, those are the ones reaching for meaning through interpreta-
they would normally want to tell anyone. tion, as contrasted with experimental scien-
A related conceptual issue is clarity. Life tific approaches that aim for one-to-one
stories can be extremely complex. Life correspondence between experience and
story interviews can help people organize, its representation (Geertz 1973).
synthesize, and present the events, circum- Transcription can be an interpretive is-
stances, and perceptions of their lives. This sue in its own right when different methods
raises the following questions: Do inter- are applied in making the information on
viewees see themselves dearly or vaguely? interview tapes useful (see Poland, Chapter
Do their stories tell us who they see them- 30, this volume). Researchers in some oral
selves as? Do their words, tone, mood, or history projects make final transcripts from
style tell us anything about them? Do their the tapes, whereas others make only bare
own meanings come across clearly in their outlines; still others develop complete cata-
stories? Do their stories tell us why as well logs from the tapes and encourage individ-
as what? ual researchers to listen to the tapes and
These questions illustrate the threefold make their own transcripts. The purpose of
complexity of every life story. First is the such partial secondary documents is essen-
story's content, which relates to the "Who tially to facilitate finding material on the
am I?" question, or what happened to make tapes (Ives 1974).
me who I am. Second is the story's con- The approach taken at the Center for the
struct, which answers the "How am I?" Study of Lives, because its purpose is to tell
question, 01' how the story is told. And third the life stories of the people being inter-
is the story's meaning, which answers the viewed in their own words, is to make com-
134 + FORMS OF INTERVIEWING

plete transcripts of everything that inter- his or her life; thus the researcher is seeking
viewees say about their lives on the tapes. the "insider's" viewpoint on the life being
The primary goal in transcription is to en- lived. A fundamental interpretive guideline
sure accuracy of meaning, to capture the is that the storyteller should be considered
meaning conveyed in the words used by the both the expert and the authority on his or
storyteller, thus the less editing, the betrer. her own life. This is based on the belief that
Of course, the final transcript depends the storyteller knows the story being told
upon the research goal. If the researcher's and will give a trnthful and thorough repre-
purpose is linguistic, then it would be im- sentation of that story. This demands a
portant to keep language usage, dialect, standard of reliability and validity that is
pauses, and other verbal idiosyncrasies in- appropriate to the life story interview as a
tact in the transcript. Because the aim of the subjective reflection of the experience in
Center for the Study of Lives is to end up question.
with flowing narratives in the words of the A life story interview is a highly personal
persons telling the stories, with their in- encounter; an analysis of a life story is
tended meanings as clearly specified as pos- highly subjective. There are a multiplicity
sible, the interviewers' questions and com- of perspectives possible, and the narratives
ments are left out of transcriptions; only the arrived at by different interviewers will be
interviewees' words appear, put into seD- representative of their own positions, just
tence and paragraph form. The transcrip- as a portrait painted from the side or from
tions may note significant emphases, actions, the front is still a faithful portrait (Frank
or sounds in brackets or as part of explana- 1980; Runyan 1982). A personal narrative
tory prefaces. Relistening to a tape while is not meant to be read as an exact record of
reading its transcript can also be interpre- everything, or even what actually hap-
tive, because the closer one can get to the pened in the person's life (Riessman 1993).
text itself, the closer one is to its meaning. Historical truth is not the main issue in nar-
Even though no interview can be per- rative; telling a story implies a certain,
fectly controlled, just as no measuring in- maybe unique, point of view. It is more im-
strument can be perfectly calibrated, there pOl·tant that the life story be deemed "trust-
are still certain ways of determining how worthy" than that it be "true." We are seek-
reliable and how valid a life story is. Reli- ing the subjective reality, after all.
ability has to do with the extent to which One of the most important measures
questioning will yield the same answers here is internal consistency, but this also
whenever and wherever it is carried out. needs to be understood subjectively. Ac-
Validity is the extent to which inquiry cording to Bert Cohler (1982), the wayan
yields the "correct" answers; this refers to individual recounts a personal narrative at
the quality of fit between information re- any point in his or her life represents the
ceived or observed and that expected (Kirk most internally consistent interpretation of
and Miller 1986; Holstein and Gubrium the way that person currently understands
1995). the past, the experienced present, and the
It is not necessary to try to interpret a life anticipated future. This means that what a
story interview against quantitative stan- life storyteller says in one part of the narra-
dards of analysis. Categories of analysis will tive should not contradict what he or she
emerge from a review of each life story text says in another part. There are inconsisten-
itself, along with a complexity of patterns cies iulife, and people may react to things
and meanings, rather than being set from one way at one time and different ways at
the beginning as in quantitative studies others, but their stories of what happened
(McCracken 1988). The researcher's ob- and what they did should be consistent
jective is to have the storyteller elaborate, within themselves. Internal consistency is a
with feeling, upon what has happened in primary quality check that can be used by
The Life Story Interview + 135

both the interviewer and the storyteller to how it all fits together, what sense it makes,
square or clarify earlier comments with re- and whether or not it is a valid story. The
cent insights if they appear to be different storyteller is the one who determines what
(McCracken 1988). gets told and whether something stays the
External consistency-where what the same or is changed. .
storyteller says conforms to what one may The question of meaning is vital to both
already know, or think one knows, about the storyteller and the researcher. Life sto-
the person telling the story-is not always rytelling is a process of creating and re-
going to be a valid measure, either, because creating a life. Each time a life story is told,
the life st'ory interview does not necessarily the person telling it can find new or addi-
seek historical truth, only the storyteller's rional meaning. The key to meaning mak-
version of or perspective on what he or she ing through life storytelling, for the one
remembers happened. The narrative ap- telling the story, is reflective thinking. If
proach to the study of lives places emphasis this is not happening, more work may be
upon internal coherence as experienced by required for meaning making to take place.
the person, rather than external criteria of To help a life storyteller to be reflective, to
truth or validity. encourage him or her pull out the story's in-
Corroboration and persuasion are twO herent meaning, the interviewer can ask di-
other control measures of the validity of a rect questions aimed at discovering the
life story interview. Subjective corrobora- meaning, especially the emotional, level of
tion comes into play when the transcribed, the story.
edited life story is given to the storyteller to Whether life stories are used as a source
review. Does the person confirm or suppott of psychological or social science research
what he or she said originally? External material, as a source of historical material
corroboration would be achieved if, upon for family and community, as a means of
reading the life story, a close relative of the promoting personal insight, or for any
storyteller, Of someone else who is falniliar other disciplinary inquiry, interpretations
with as much of that person's life as possi- of life stories-the meaning-making process
ble, confirms what was said as well. Persua- -are usually of two kinds: those that are
sion is an objective measure of whether the founded upon a theoretical basis and
life story seems reasonable and convincing those that emerge from a personal frame
to others. Does the story, or any part of it, of reference.
strike a resonant chord with us, based on There are numerous discipline-based
our own experience? If the experiences and theories that can be used with life stories
events recoimted are not familiar to us, (see Holstein and Gubrium 2000a; Kenyon
does it seem possible or plausible that they and Randall 1997). In my view, however, a
could have happened to someone else theory should be applied to a life story only
(Riessman 1993)? Another aspect of per- when and if it fits the story well-if the the-
suasion is how a story involves us: Does the ory actually emerges out of the story itself.
story compel, stimulate, delight, or invite One quick example: In interpreting the life
us in any way (Gergen 1985)? This may be story of a 60-year-old man who emphasizes
more a matter of storytelling ability than of the importance of his relationship with his
truth telling, and the former is as much a children and grandchildren, a researcher
criterion of validity as is the latter in life might want to make reference to Erikson's
storytelling. (1963, 1980) theory of human develop-
The standard being put forth here is that ment, in which the stage of middle adult-
the life storyteller has the final say in telling hood has as its core conflict "generativity
t4e story, even after it has been transcribed, versus stagnation."
because he or she is the one telling the story Personal interpretations of life stories
in the first place and is the one to determine can be very important. The researcher's
136 .. FORMS OF INTERVIEWING

own personal frame of reference can be ap- Truthfulness is a matter of scale. For exam-
propriate, as well. I would suggest three ba- ple, the truths of "the little story" may be
sic guidelines in this regard. First, the re- valid but perhaps questionable in relation
searcher should not judge, but, rather, to larger social questions, such as the typi-
make connections. Rather than assuming a cality of a particular respondent's story in
stance "over and against" the person telling relation to others of similar backgrounds. It
the story, analyzing, limiting, or classifying all depends on the interpretive context in
the storyteller in some way, the researcher question.
should seek to find the personal relevance B. B. King, the great blues singer, has
of the story. Second, a life story is a text like self-consciously addressed these views. In
any other document or story in any other his autobiography Blues All around Me, he
field. It can stand on its own, because it au- acknowledges:
tomatically and immediately evokes certain
personal, subjective responses based on the
experiences it describes or the perspective
of the reader. Third, we are all each other's
,I 0,
When it comes to my own life, others
may know the cold facts better than me.
~ Scholars have told me to my face that
teachers. Like a novel or a poem, a life story
I'm mixed up. I smile but don't argue.
has something to say to us about life. We of-
Truth is, cold facts don't tell the whole
ten learn from the stories we hear or read.
These are all reasons researchers need to :: story. Reading this, some may accuse
me of remembering wrong. That's
take a personal, consider-one-life-at-a-time
okay, because I'm not writing a cold-
approach to interpreting life stories.
blooded history. I'm writing a memory
!!ill! of my heart. That's the rruth I'm after-
THE SCALE OF
TRUTHFULNESS
illIfilfollowing my feelings, no matter where
they lead. (King and Ritz 1996:2)

As many disciplines take the narrative King wants to understand himself, so he re-
turn toward story and away from the im- members the best he can, and tells a story of
mutable laws of nature, historians, social the heart. This may be all we can ask of a
scientists, philosophers, and legal scholars person telling his own story without the aid
have begun to celehrate the particularity of a photographic memory. This may be the
and localism inherent in the medium of best we can expect. But it still leaves us with
"the little story" (Arras 1997). This has cre- the dilemma of not knowing whether it is
ated considerable differences of opinion King's actual experience or an experience
about the use, value, and meaning of per- of the heart that he tells about.
sonal narratives. There are scales of validity for all life sto-
Perhaps the most important question to ries, all autobiographies, all interviews.
ask here is, Is there a connection between People cannot be, and don't need to be, un-
rhe story being told and "the truth" being der oath when telling their life stories. Real-
sought? One view is that the stories that istically, life story interviewers should re-
convey the subjective quest of the person, member that it is possible that what they are
even though they might be "evasive," "are getting from those they interview is not the
their own truth" (Frank 1995). Another whole truth. They can be pretty sure, how-
view is that each of us shades the truth or ever, that what they are getting are the sto-
even intentionally distort.s crucial facts in ries respondents want to tell. That in itself
the stories we tell about our own lives (Ar- tells us a good deal about what we really
ras 1997). My view, from my own experi- want to know. As A.rras (1997) points out,
ence with life story interviews, is that both "We ought to favor such narratives, first,
of these perspectives can be accurate. because we can't do any better."

--------------------------------------~~
The Life Story Interview • 137

• Conclusion telling them, are timeless; settings and cir-


cumstances change, but motifs and the
meanings they represent remain constant
Whether they are gathered for research across lives and time. Life stories make con-
purposes on particular topics or questions nections, shed light on the possible paths
or to learn more about human lives and so- through life, and, maybe most important,
cieties from different individuals' perspec- lead us to the human spirit, to our deepest
tives, life stories serve as excellent means feelings, the values we live by, and the eter-
for understanding how people see their nal meaning of life.
own experiences, their own lives, and their More life stories need to be brought
interactions with others. Researchers who forth that respect and honor the personal
employ the approach to the life story inter- meanings life storytellers give to their sto-
view suggested here may avoid many typi- ries. We share our stories for the bond of
cal research and publication dilemmas if understanding that is established between
they keep certain primary "values" in mind. us through the telling. In this regard, there
If one sets out with clear intent to help peo- is an exciting future for life stories and the
ple tell their stories in their own words, the narrative study of lives. The more we share
results will be clear as well. OUf own stories, the closer we all become.
The essences of life stories told seriously
and consciously, in the voices of the persons

!iii References

Abu-Lughod, L. 1993. Writing Women's Worlds: Bedouin Stories. Berkeley: University of California
Press.
Allen, B. and L. Mantell. 1981. From Memory to History: Using Oral Sources in Local Historical Re-
seaTch. Nashville, TN: American Association for State and Local History.
Allport, G. W. 1942. The Use of Personal Documents in Psychological Science. New York: Social Sci-
ence Research CounciL
Arras,]. D. 1997. "Nice Story, but So What? Narrative and Justification in Ethics." In Stories and
TheiT Limits: Narrative Approaches to Bioethics, edited by H. 1. Nelson. New York: Routledge.
Atkinson, R. 1985. Life Outcomes: Elderhood in a Bicameral Culture. Ann Arbor, MI: University Mi-
crofilms International.
- - - . 1995. The Gift of Stories: Practical and Spiritual Applications of Autobiography, Life Stories,
and Personal Mythmaking. Westport, CT: Bergin & Garvey.
- - - . 1998. The Life Story InteTview. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Ben-Ari, A. 1995. "It's the Telling That Makes the Difference." Pp. 153-72 in The Narrative Study of
Lives, Vol. 3, Interpreting Experience: The Narrative Study orLives, edited by R. Josselson and A.
Lieblich. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Bertaux, D. 1981. Biography and Society. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.
Birren, J. E. and B. A. Birren. 1996. "Autobiography: Exploring the Self and Encouraging Develop-
ment." Pp. 283-99 in Aging and Biography: Explorations in Adult Development, edited by]. E.
Birren, G. M. Kenyon,]. E. Ruth, J.]. F. Schroots, and T. Svensson. New York: Springer.
Birren,]. E., G. M. Kenyon,]. E. Ruth, J.]. F. Schroots, and T. Svensson, eds. 1996.Agingand Biogra-
phy: Exp/omtions in Adult Development. New York: Springer.
Boxer, A. M. and B. Cohler. 1989. "The Life Course of Gay and Lesbian Youth: An Immodest Pro-
posal for the Study of Lives." Journal of Homosexuality 17:315-55.
Brockelman, P. 1985. Time and Self. New York: Crossroads.
Bruner, J. 1986. Actual Minds, Possible Worlds. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
---.1987. "Life as Narrative." Social Research 54:11-32.
138 • FORMS OF INTERVIEWING

- - - . 1990. Acts of Meaning. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.


-. 1991. "The Narrative Construction of Reality." Critical Inquiry 18:1-21-
Butler, R. N. 1963. "The Life Review: An Interpretation of Reminiscence in the Aged." Psychiatry
26:65-67.
Campbell, J. 1968. The Hero with a Thousand Faces. New York: Meridian.
- - - . 1970. The Masks of God, Vol. 4, Creative Mythology. New York: Viking.
Cohler, B. 1982. "Personal Narrative and the Life Course." In Life Span Development and Behavior,
Vol. 4, edited by P. B. Baltes and O. G. Brim. New York: Academic Press.
Cohler, B. 1988. "The Human Studies and Life History." Social Service Review 62:552-75.
Cohler, B. 1993. "Aging, Morale, and Meaning: The Nexus of Narrative." Pp. 107-33 in Voices and
Visions of Aging, edited by T. R. Cole, W. A. Achenbaum, P. L. ]akobi, and R. Kastenbaum. New
York: Springer.
Comstock, G. L. 1995. Religious Autobiographies. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
de Vries, B. and A.]. Lehman. 1996. "The Complexity of Personal Narratives." In Aging and Biogra-
phy: Explorations in Adult Development, edited by J. E. Birren, G. M. Kenyon, J. E. Ruth,].]. F.
Schroots, and T. Svensson. New York: Springer.
Eliade, M. 1954. The Myth of the Eternal Return. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Erikson, E. 1958. Young Man Luther: A Study in Psychoanalysis and History. New York: Norton.
---.1963. Childhood and Society. New York: Norton.
- - - . 1964. Insight and Responsibility. New York: Norton.
- - - . 1969. Gandhi's Truth: On the Origins of Militant Nonviolence. New York: Norton.
- - - . 1975. Life History and the Historical Moment. New York: Norton.
- - - . 1980. Identity and the Life Cycle. New York: Norton.
Frank, A. W 1995. The Wounded Storyteller: Body, Illness, and Ethics. Chicago: University of Chi-
cago Press.
Frank, G. 1980. "Life Histories in Gerontology: The Subjective Side to Aging." In New Methods from
Old Age Research: AnthropologicalAlternatives edited by C. L. Fry and]. Keith. Chicago: Loyola
J

of Chicago University Press.


Freeman, M.1992. "Self as Narrative: The Place of Life History in Studyingthetife Span." Pp. 15-43
in The Self: Definitional and Methodological Issues, edited by T. M. Brinthaupt and R. P. Lipka. Al-
bany: State University of New York Press.
Freud, S. 1957. "Leonardo da Vinci and a Memory of His Childhood" [1910]. Pp. 59-137 in The
Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, Vol. 11, edited and
translated by}. Strachey. London: Hogarth.
Freud, S. 1958. "Psycho-analytic Notes on an Autobiographical Account of a Case of Paranoia"
[1911]. Pp. 3-82 in The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud,
Vol. 12, edited and translated by ]. Stradley. London: Hogarth.
Geertz, C. 1973. The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays. New York: Basic Books.
Gergen, K. J. 1985. "The Social Constructionist Movement in Modern Psychology." A.merican Psy-
chologist 40:266-75.
Gergen, M. M. and K.]. Gergen. 1993. "Narratives of the Gendered Body in Popular Autobiogra-
phy." Pp. 191-218 in The Narrative Study of Lives, Vol. 1, The Narrative Study of Lives, edited by
R. Josselson and A. Lieblich. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
Gubrium,]. F. and]. A. Holstein. 1998. "Narrative Practice and the Coherence of Personal Stories."
Sociological Quarterly 39: 163-87.
Helle, A. P. 1991. "Reading Women's Autobiographies: A Map of Reconstructed Knowing."
Pp. 48-66 in Stories Lives Tell: Narrative and Dialogue in Education, edited by C. Witherell and
N. Noddings. New York: Teachers College Press.
Holstein, J. A. and J. F. Gubrium. 1995. The Active Interview. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
- - - . 2000a. Constructing the Life Course. 2d ed. Dix Hills, NY: General Hall.
- - - . 2000b. The Self We Live By: Narrative Identity in a Postmodern World. New York: Oxford
University Press.
rves, E. 1974. The Tape-Recorded Interview: A Manual for Field Workers in Folklore and Oral History.
Nashville: University of Tennessee Press.
The Life Story Interview • 139

- - - , ed. 1986. FolklifeAnnual: Symposium on the Life Story. Washington, DC: American Folklife
Center.
Josse1son, R. 1995. "Imagining the Real: Empathy, Narrative, and the Dialogic Self." Pp. 27-44 in
The Narrative Study arLives, Vol. 3, Interpreting E:..:perience: The Narrative Study of Lives, edited
by R. ]osselson and A. Lieblich. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Josselson, R., ed. 1996. The Narrative Study afLives, Vol. 4, Ethics and Process in the Narrative Study
of Lives. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
]osselson, R. and A. Lieblich, eds. 1993. The Narrative Study of Lives, VoL 1, The Narrative Study of
Lives. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
- - - , eds. 1995. The Narrative Study of Lives, Vol. 3, Interpreting Experience: The Narrative Study
of Lives. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
- - - , eds. 1999. The Narrative Study of Lives, Vol. 6, Making Meaning of Narratives in the Narra-
tive Study of Lives. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Kenyon, G. M., P. Clark, and B. de Vries, eds. 2001. Narrative Gerontology. New York: Springer.
Kenyon, G. M. and W. L. Randall. 1997. Restorying Our Lives: Personal Growth through Autobio-
graphical Reflection. Westport, CT: Praeger.
King, B. B. and D. Ritz. 1996. BluesAli around Me: The Autobiography ofB. B. King. New York, Avon.
Kirk,]. and M. L. Miller. (1986). Reliability and Validity in Qualitative Research. Beverly Hills, CA,
Sage.
Klockars, C. B. 1974. The Professional Fence. New York: Free Press.
Kroger,]. 1993. "Identity and Context: How Identity Statuses Choose Their Match." Pp. 130-62 in
The Narrative Study of Lives, Vol. 1, The Narrative Study of Lives, edited by R. Josselson and
A. Lieblich. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
Langness, L. L. and Frank, G. 1981. Lives: An Anthropological Approach to Biography. Novato, CA:
Chandler & Sharp.
Lieblich, A. and R. J osselson, eds. 1994. The Narrative Study of Lives, Vol. 2, Exploring Identity and
Gender: The Narrative Study of Lives. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
- - - , eds. 1997. The Narrative Study of Lives, Vol. 5, The Narrative Study of Lives. Thousand
Oaks, CA, Sage.
Linde, C. 1993. Life Stories: The Creation of Coherence. New York: Oxford University Press.
Marcia,]. E. 1966. "Development and Validation of Ego Identity Status." Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology 3:551-58.
McAdams, D. P. 1993. StoTies We Live By: Personal Myths and the Making of the Self. New York: Wil-
liam Morrow.
McCracken, G. 1988. The Long Interview. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
Mkhonza, S. 1995. "Life Histories as Social Texts of Personal Experiences in Sociolinguistic Studies:
A Look at the Lives of Domestic Workers in Swaziland." Pp. 173-204 in The Narrative Study of
Lives, Vol. 3, Interpreting Experience: The Narrative Study of Lives, edited by R. Josselson and
A. Lieblich. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Murray, H. A. 1938. Explorations in Personality. New York: Oxford University Press.
- - - . 1955. "American Icarus." Pp. 615-41 in Clinical Studies in Personality, Vol. 3, edited by
A. Burton and R. E. Harris. New York: Harper & Row.
Olney,]., ed. 1980. Autobiography: Essays Theoretical and Critical. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univer-
sity Press.
Randall, W. L. 1995. The Stories We Are: An Essay on Self-CTeation. Toronto: University of Toronto
Press.
Riessman, C. K. 1993. Narrative Analysis. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
Rosenrhal, G. 1993. '<Reconstruction of Life Stories: Principles of Selection in Generating Stories for
Narrative Biographical Interviews." Pp. 59-91 in The Narrative Study afrives, VoL 1, The Narra-
tive Study of Lives, edited by R. Josse1son and A. Lieblich. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
Runyan, W M. 1982. Life Histories andPsychobiography: Explorations in Theory and Method. New
York: Oxford University Press.
Sarbin, T. R. 1986. "The Narrative as Root Metaphor for Psychology." Pp. 3-21 in Narrative Psychol-
ogy: The Storied Nature of Human Conduct, edited by T. R. Sarbin. New York: Praeger.
140 • FORt\1S OF INTERVIEWING

Spradley, J. 1979. The Ethnographic Interview. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.
Stewart, A. J. 1994. "The Women's Movement and Women's Lives: Linking Individual Development
and Social Events." Pp. 230~50 in The Narrative Study of Lives~ Vol. 2, Exploring Identity and
Gender: The Narrative Study of Lives, edited by A. Lieblich and R.Josselson. Thousand Oaks, CA:
Sage.
Tillieh, P. 1957. Dynamics of Faith. New York: Harper & Row.
Titan, J. 1980. "The Life Story." Journal of American Folklore 93:276-92.
van Gennep, A. 1960. The Rites of Passage. Chicago: University of Chicago Press~
White, M. and D. Epston. 1990. Narrative Means to Therapeutic Ends. New York: Norton.
Widdershoven, G. A. M. 1993. «The Story of Life: Hermeneutic Perspectives on the Relationship
between Narrative and Life History." Pp. 1-20 in The Narrative Study of Lives, Vol. 1, edited by
R. Josselson and A. Lieblich. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
Witherell, C. and N. Noddings, eds. 1991. Stories Lives Tell: Narrative and Dialogue in Education.
New York: Teachers College Press.

You might also like