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Featured researches published by Christopher Dole.


Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry | 2009

Ways of Asking, Ways of Telling

Thomas J. Csordas; Christopher Dole; Allen Tran; Matthew J. Strickland; Michael Storck

The interpretive understanding that can be derived from interviews is highly influenced by methods of data collection, be they structured or semistructured, ethnographic, clinical, life-history or survey interviews. This article responds to calls for research into the interview process by analyzing data produced by two distinctly different types of interview, a semistructured ethnographic interview and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM, conducted with participants in the Navajo Healing Project. We examine how the two interview genres shape the context of researcher-respondent interaction and, in turn, influence how patients articulate their lives and their experience in terms of illness, causality, social environment, temporality and self/identity. We discuss the manner in which the two interviews impose narrative constraints on interviewers and respondents, with significant implications for understanding the jointly constructed nature of the interview process. The argument demonstrates both divergence and complementarity in the construction of knowledge by means of these interviewing methods.


Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry | 2010

Ways of Asking, Ways of Telling: A Methodological Comparison of Ethnographic and Research Diagnostic Interviews

Thomas J. Csordas; Christopher Dole; Allen Tran; Matthew J. Strickland; Michael Storck

The interpretive understanding that can be derived from interviews is highly influenced by methods of data collection, be they structured or semistructured, ethnographic, clinical, life-history or survey interviews. This article responds to calls for research into the interview process by analyzing data produced by two distinctly different types of interview, a semistructured ethnographic interview and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM, conducted with participants in the Navajo Healing Project. We examine how the two interview genres shape the context of researcher-respondent interaction and, in turn, influence how patients articulate their lives and their experience in terms of illness, causality, social environment, temporality and self/identity. We discuss the manner in which the two interviews impose narrative constraints on interviewers and respondents, with significant implications for understanding the jointly constructed nature of the interview process. The argument demonstrates both divergence and complementarity in the construction of knowledge by means of these interviewing methods.


International Journal of Middle East Studies | 2006

MASS MEDIA AND THE REPULSIVE ALLURE OF RELIGIOUS HEALING: THE CINCI HOCA IN TURKISH MODERNITY

Christopher Dole

[Fade in from commercial, sonorous male voice advertising the evening news.] Once again a cinci hoca , once again a sexual harassing… Recently in our country, this exorcizing of spirits, witchcraft, fortune-telling, and mediumship, which are all products of primitive, magical thought, have been spreading like an epidemic. For years, either knowingly or unknowingly, they have been given extensive advertisement in newspapers and on television stations that seek to increase their circulation with dramatic news. —Dr. Orhan Ozturk, Cumhuriyet , 1997


Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry | 2010

Ways of Asking, Ways of Telling : A Methodological Comparison of Ethnographic and Research Diagnostic Interviews (Original Paper)

Thomas J. Csordas; Christopher Dole; Allen Tran; Matthew J. Strickland; Michael Storck

The interpretive understanding that can be derived from interviews is highly influenced by methods of data collection, be they structured or semistructured, ethnographic, clinical, life-history or survey interviews. This article responds to calls for research into the interview process by analyzing data produced by two distinctly different types of interview, a semistructured ethnographic interview and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM, conducted with participants in the Navajo Healing Project. We examine how the two interview genres shape the context of researcher-respondent interaction and, in turn, influence how patients articulate their lives and their experience in terms of illness, causality, social environment, temporality and self/identity. We discuss the manner in which the two interviews impose narrative constraints on interviewers and respondents, with significant implications for understanding the jointly constructed nature of the interview process. The argument demonstrates both divergence and complementarity in the construction of knowledge by means of these interviewing methods.


Sociology of Health and Illness | 2010

The need to act a little more ‘scientific’: biomedical researchers investigating complementary and alternative medicine

Ginger Polich; Christopher Dole; Ted J. Kaptchuk


Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry | 2004

In the shadows of medicine and modernity: medical integration and secular histories of religious healing in Turkey.

Christopher Dole


Labor Studies Journal | 2005

Cracking the Temp Trap: Day Laborers' Grievances and Strategies for Change in Cleveland, Ohio

Daniel Kerr; Christopher Dole


Ethos | 2003

Trials of Navajo Youth: Identity, Healing, and the Struggle for Maturity

Christopher Dole; Thomas J. Csordas


Archive | 2012

Healing Secular Life: Loss and Devotion in Modern Turkey

Christopher Dole


American Anthropologist | 2012

Revolution, Occupation, and Love: The 2011 Year in Cultural Anthropology

Christopher Dole

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Allen Tran

University of California

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Michael Storck

University of Washington

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Ted J. Kaptchuk

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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