Abstract
Abstract
Previous research exploring the use of narratives in medical interviews has primarily examined the history-taking phase to
illustrate the ways in which physicians and patients discursively collaborate to organize and interpret patients’ illness experiences (Eggly, 2002; Halkowski, 2006; Stivers & Heritage, 2001). In this paper, the scope will be expanded to demonstrate that narrative accounts are
interwoven and unfold across various phases of the medical interview, not only the history-taking phase, and are utilized in a variety of
ways to collaboratively accomplish specific social practices. A narrative as talk-in-interaction approach is used to examine narrative
accounts using audio-recordings of naturally occurring medical interview data (US, American English). This paper examines the ways in which
narratives are locally occasioned to do a variety of things (e.g., raise difficult topics, actively resist treatment,
reinforce identities), including influencing the treatment decision making process.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),History,Education
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