Description
Although qualitative approaches to psychological research have a long history in the discipline, they have also been, and remain, marginalized from the canon of mainstream scientific psychology. At the current moment, however, there is growing recognition of the importance of qualitative methods and a movement toward a more inclusive and eclectic stance on psychological research. This volume reflects upon the historical and contemporary place of qualitative methods in psychology and considers future possibilities for further integration of these methods in the discipline. Scholars representing a wide-range of perspectives in qualitative and theoretical psychology reflect on the historical and contemporary positions of qualitative methods in psychology with an eye to the future of research and theory in the discipline. This book encourages a more critical and inclusive stance on research, recognizing both the limits and contributions that different methodological approaches can make to the project of psychological knowledge.
Table of Contents
Series Editor’s Foreword
Brent D. Slife
Introduction: Situating Qualitative Methods in Psychological Science
Brian Schiff
Chapter 1: Some Historical Perspective on the Marginalization of Qualitative Methods Within Mainstream Scientific Psychology
James T. Lamiell
Chapter 2: Quantitative, Qualitative, or Mixed? Should Philosophy Guide Method Choice?
Kathleen L. Slaney and Donna Tafreshi
Chapter 3: Qualitative Methods as Fundamental Tools: Autonomy and Integration in Mixed Methods Research
Frederick J. Wertz
Chapter 4: Qualitative Psychology and the New Pluralism
Kenneth J. Gergen
Chapter 5: Qualitative Methods Enhance Our Understanding and Treatment of People with Alzheimer’s Disease
Steven R. Sabat
Chapter 6: Understanding Psychology, Differently
Brian Schiff
Chapter 7: Qualitative Psychology’s Coming of Age: Are There Grounds for Hope?
Mark Freeman



