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:-) Thanks much for the 'passionate and elegant', just the two adjectives I love!
Doubtless there are deeper questions here. Look at funded projects from the ESRC and the AHRC that fund qualitative research. Or EC projects that fund projects with qualitative elements, does sample size not matter? Of course it does. I'll speak from my field... have a look at BBC or BBFC or BFI supported audience research projects where scholars contributed outside of academia for research that speaks to policy and so on, of course a certain number of focus groups and interviews were needed. That is what I do for my own research too.
I think 'to matter' itself would be a rather confusing term. Matter for what? For whom? This above is one kind of mattering. Another as I said, is what I find when occasionally I browse through anthropology journals instead of sociology (not implying crude mappings here)... when I see the instances I have spoken of below, that I realise that much of research that happens in these areas, that do not per se interface with policy and similar, or borders on humanities or tilts towards it... there it would be a largely irrelevant question...
I do a PhD where I have a strange task and position. I come from a non disciplinary background, I study media and comm, but am neither a sociologist first, nor an anthropologist, nor anything of worth... I merely did my undergrads in geography (entirely useless for media till now) and then Masters in media and comm and here I am in just a couple of yrs from rivers and glaciers over to a phd in media. In my PhD I am working with, hang on, hold your breath: psychology (!) and literary aesthetics (!) to do research with digital literacies, that also interfaces with the policy literature....
Torn i truly am! From psychology I am trying to retrieve elements of social constructionism and leave out the quant, from literary aesthetics I am fleeing to retain the best and also retain my identity as a social science researcher, from digital literacies I am trying to escape being called a technological deterministic, and the policy element...alas, some say it is too normative for any kind of 'critical' research....
and all of these have different ideas of sample size and why it does or does not matter....
I am afraid I have only added to the questions here, and not answered a single one... for whether it does or does not matter will depend I think on (inter)disciplinarity (anthropology or psychology for e.g.), domains (purely scholarly, or policy relevant) and of course personal opinions....
Walminski, I didn't think you were attacking anyone and you didn't appear to be digging yourself into a hole either! I can't remember you ever attacking anyone on here actually. Thanks for the reference, I will check it out before expanding my exceedingly tiny (but valid!) samples in any future project destined for an alternative disciplinary readership.:-)
Well! So much for light hearted banter: this has to be one of the most dense and intellectual discussions I've read on here. Try again Adam.
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My PhD proposal would be a Critical Discourse Analysis into the dark humour of such shows as Family Guy and Southpark, thus destroying any previous joy anyone ever got out of those shows by analysing it to bits but giving me licence to submit a thesis full of swear words and crude jokes.
ahh at last a CDA in our midst! (I dont do CDA, just know a couple of people who do)... hmm.. i do the opposite of CDA in a way actually.. i do audience reception research in a way... so I guess opposite as in, meaning in the text and meaning at the text-reader intersect....
Having just had my income slashed by a third, and having, now, been left wondering 'how the hell am I going to survive for the next blimey knows how many years' I believe, I am doing the weirdest PhD!! Me and all the other self funders in the world who routinely self flagilate themselves financially. I'm going to have to take on more paid work and I really don't now how the **** I'm going to be able to concentrate and complete before I hit my retirement age. So, yes, it's me, an all the other self funders...
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Wow! Quite a few people who are soooooo politically correct that I'm bound to offend. A mate of mine's ex did a PhD on black in paintings - don't know which paintings but there you go. Black in paintings. I see a red door and I wonder why wasn't it painted black? Pretty sh*t though because he failed...
Mine research (not PhD) been summed up quite nicely as mice porn... Which I like. Minnie does the hedgerows. It's a working title.
Oh, to the guy who wrote the very rude google comment - I think we're here to help each other. Just a thought...
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Hey Maria, that's true about Dickens, I've noticed he often chooses names which have relevance to his characters; for example, the cruel, glutenous orphanage owner called Mr. Fat *******. I think your friend is right, but am not sure how that element of Dickens would fit into a Phd, but then I'm not a literature postgrad.
In fact, as I remember this is something you learn at GCSE and A'level: the name Oliver has associations with dignity and strength, add the Twist surname and you have an indicaton of Oliver's character and fate. Also the name Pip from Great Expectations suggests a seed, a fitting analogy for the story of a young man's progress intoo maturity.
I take you didn't study literature at GCSE, or if so they'd stopped doing Dickens in your cohort so I've attached some GCSE stuff on Great Expectations:
http://www.greenfield.durham.sch.uk/Dickens_3_names.htm
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