Given the anthropological focus on ethnography as a kind of deep immersion, the interview poses theoretical and methodological challenges for the discipline. This volume explores those challenges and argues that the interview should be seen as a special, productive site of ethnographic encounter, a site of a very particular and important kind of knowing. In a range of social contexts and cultural settings, contributors show how the interview is experienced and imagined as a kind of space within which personal, biographic and social cues and norms can be explored and interrogated. The interview possesses its own authenticity, thereforetrue to the persons involved and true to their moment of interactionwhilst at the same time providing information on human capacities and proclivities that is generalizable beyond particular social and cultural contexts.
Introduction:The Interview as Analytical Category
James Staples and Katherine Smith
Chapter 1.The Transcendent Subject? Biography as a Medium for Writing Life and Times
Pat Caplan
Chapter 2.Using and Refusing Antiretroviral Drugs in South Africa: Towards a Biographical Approach
Isak Niehaus
Chapter 3.An Up and Down Life: Understanding Leprosy through Biography
James Staples
Chapter 4.Finding My Wit: Explaining Banter and Making the Effortless Appear in the Unstructured Interview
Katherine Smith
Chapter 5.Different Times and Other Altermodern Possibilities: Filming Interviews with Children as Ethnographic Wanderings
Angels Trias i Valls
Chapter 6.Dialogues with Anthropologists: Where Interviews Become Relevant