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Ethnographic Interview

The ethnographic interview, formalized by James Spradley, is a deliberately staged conversation whose goal is to discover how an insider categorizes and talks about their own cultural world rather than to test the researcher's categories. It proceeds through a developmental research sequence of question types — broad grand-tour questions, fine-grained descriptive questions, structural questions that probe how knowledge is organized, and contrast questions that surface the distinctions informants draw between terms. The point is not a list of facts but a reconstructed map of meanings expressed in the informant's own native terms.

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Sources

  1. Spradley, J. P. (1979). The Ethnographic Interview. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN: 9780030444968
  2. Bernard, H. R. (2017). Research Methods in Anthropology: Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches (6th ed.). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN: 9780759112421

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). The Ethnographic Interview (Spradley's Developmental Research Sequence). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/anthropology/ethnographic-interview

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Referenced by

ScholarGateEthnographic Interview (The Ethnographic Interview (Spradley's Developmental Research Sequence)). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/anthropology/ethnographic-interview · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026