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A celebration of the rich tapestry of phenomenology's commonalities

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posted on 2024-10-28, 01:56 authored by Emma TurleyEmma Turley

Purpose 

Phenomenology has a long tradition as a qualitative research method in the social and health sciences. The application of phenomenological methods to understand lived experiences and subjectivities offers researchers a rich tapestry of methodological approaches, often however, the availability of these methods to researchers is tempered as a result of inflexible ideas regarding their use. This article aims to highlight the uniting features between approaches. 

Design/methodology/approach 

The paper begins by offering a brief overview of the two traditions within phenomenology, the descriptive and interpretive approaches and traces the development of each one. It then presents an overview of the commonalities shared by both approaches in with particular reference to the philosophical and methodological cohesion between them. 

Findings 

Frequently, the literature fails to focus on how these methodologies can be used together, and instead foregrounds the ontological and methodological differences between them. While an overview of some of the more vociferous debates within phenomenology are included and acknowledged, the paper calls for a focus on the shared goals of the phenomenological project. 

Originality/value 

This article aims to illustrate that, while recognising differences, the two phenomenological traditions have more in common that unites them, and argues that once this is applied pragmatically, a multiplicity of phenomenological traditions are available to researchers.

History

Volume

23

Issue

4

Start Page

409

End Page

419

Number of Pages

22

eISSN

1448-0980

ISSN

1443-9883

Publisher

Emerald

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2023-03-03

Era Eligible

  • Yes

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