Nursing Research: A Qualitative PerspectivePatricia L. Munhall Twenty-five chapters describe the methods of and principles underlying qualitative research as it is applied to the field of nursing. Examples of various methods are provided, including phenomenology, grounded theory, ethnography, case study, historical research, interpretive analysis, and active re |
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Page xxii
... lived reality serve as the focus of inquiry , toward the end that subjective and objective realities merge or unify in a closer alliance between lived reality and our knowledge of it . Because the perceived world , or lived reality ...
... lived reality serve as the focus of inquiry , toward the end that subjective and objective realities merge or unify in a closer alliance between lived reality and our knowledge of it . Because the perceived world , or lived reality ...
Page 116
... lived experience . " The essence or nature of an experience has been adequately described in language if the description reawakens or shows us the lived quality and significance of the experience in a fuller or deeper manner " ( p . 10 ) ...
... lived experience . " The essence or nature of an experience has been adequately described in language if the description reawakens or shows us the lived quality and significance of the experience in a fuller or deeper manner " ( p . 10 ) ...
Page 191
... ( lived time ) ; spatial ( lived space ) ; corporeal ( lived body ) ; and relational ( lived relationships ) . In the dissertation ( Lauterbach , 1992 ) , three cen- tral dimensions were identified from which nine themes of meaning were ...
... ( lived time ) ; spatial ( lived space ) ; corporeal ( lived body ) ; and relational ( lived relationships ) . In the dissertation ( Lauterbach , 1992 ) , three cen- tral dimensions were identified from which nine themes of meaning were ...
Contents
LANGUAGE AND Nursing Research | 3 |
EPISTEMOLOGY IN NURSING | 37 |
PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATIONS OF QUALITATIVE RESEARCH | 65 |
Copyright | |
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action Advances AIDS analysis approach asked aware become beginning behavior believe chapter chest choices clients codes collection concern context continue critical cultural death decision described discussed disease emergency ethnography evaluation example experience expressions feel field focus grounded heart historical hospital human idea identified important individual inquiry interaction interest interpretation interview Journal knowledge language literature lived meaning method mothers nature notes nursing research objective observation pain paradigm participants particular patients perspective phenomenological phenomenon philosophical physician positive possible practice present Press problem proposal qualitative research quantitative questions reality refers reflect relation responses scientific setting situation social sources specific step story symptoms themes theoretical theory things thought tion understanding University writing York