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International Journal of Qualitative Methods

ISSN 1609-4069

2 papers in the library · 48 citations · publishing 2021-2025

Papers

Phenomenological Research Needs to be Renewed: Time to Integrate Enactivism as a Flexible Resource

International Journal of Qualitative Methods January 1, 2021 Peter Stilwell, K. Harman 43 citations

Phenomenology as a qualitative research method has become overly rigid and prescriptive, especially regarding the epoché and reduction. This process paper argues that the emerging paradigm of post-cognitivism and the aligned movement of enactivism—rooted in phenomenology and embodied cognition—offer a flexible alternative. Enactivism treats sense-making as a 5E process (Embodied, Embedded, Enacted, Emotive, and Extended) and can be integrated with existing methods like observation, interviews, and thematic analysis. The authors draw on their enactive study of pain-related meaning co-construction between clinicians and patients to illustrate how this approach moves beyond methodological individualism and captures the dynamic, context-sensitive nature of subjective experience. A sample interview guide, codebook, and rigor components are provided.

Meditation in Qualitative Research for Bracketing and Beyond

International Journal of Qualitative Methods January 15, 2025 K. Grajzel 5 citations

The author recounts using mantra meditation as a form of bracketing during a phenomenological study, proposing that bracketing and meditation are inseparable in qualitative research. Rather than aiming for objectivity or immersion, this approach uses meditation to help the researcher become fully present, diminishing subjectivity so that participants' experiences can be heard and interpreted faithfully. The goal is not to eliminate subjectivity but to allow the researcher to attend fully to the other.