© Please note: Glenda Mae Green owns the copyright for the dissertation below. You may download and print one copy for educational purposes only. These pages may not be duplicated, distributed, redistributed or republished in any manner without express permission from the author.
This chapter portrays a meta-journey. It describes my journey
to understanding the personal journeys of three Caribbean Canadian
women as they portray their successful rite of passage from childhood
to their post-college years. It outlines three ethnographic frames
on which the study is hungentering the field, collecting
the data, and analyzing the data. It concludes with an explication
of the three alternative forms of representing the data collected
as I sought to capture the essence of the women's lived experiences.
This study developed in response to my puzzlement' (Stake,
1995) about how young women's definition of success is shaped
and developed. It is, in essence, a longitudinal study thick with
heuristic, narrative description designed to help readers hear
the voices of three young women as they recount how they counteracted
stereotype vulnerability' (Way, 1995), garnered support,
challenged obstacles, and achieved their goals.
Encompassing a period of nine years, from 1989 when it first began
to 1998, this study explores the women's lives against a thematic
network. It illustrates that no life is singly dimensional (Smith,
1994). It illuminates the context of their successtheir
support and distractions, and the critical psychosocial events
which accentuate the salience of their strong inner core.
Narrative inquiry drove this study. The spontaneity of oral narratives
offered an
unabridged and intimate perspective of the young women's interpretation
and
understanding of their own lives (Etter-Lewis, 1993).
The dissertation aims to provide a text so vivid with narrative
that it sets the scene for readers' vicarious participation in
the lived experience of success building. This rich description
provides a deeper level for understanding the success of young
women often marginalized by society. The study validates the experiences
of others who walk in similar paths, and shows others how to become
successful, particularly as it is mediated through familial and
educational support. Interpretation undergirds the telling of
the account: from the field to the text, to the reader (Denzin,
1994).
Entry into the Field
Travel Guides Introduced
The 1989 phase of the study focused on nine Caribbean Canadian
women who were viewed, by teachers and peers alike, as likely
to succeedbased on their academic skills and their positions
in student government. These young women were born in Canada or
had spent the majority of their lives in that country.
In the 1997 phase of the inquirythe post-college years,
three of the nine women who had provided the dialogical resources
for the first phase of the study are studied in depth as the investigation
continues. These three women constitute a convenience sample whose
inclusion in the study is based on their willingness to participate,
and their accessibility in eastern North America. That they had
informally communicated with me during the interim years facilitated
my search for their whereabouts. These young women are now in
their mid- to late 20s, have completed at least 2 years of college,
and are well on their way to their self-regulated image of success
as their 1989 transcripts reflected it. The women, Jade, Silver,
and Eboni, are introduced in chapters 5, 6, and 7 under the jeweled
nomenclature which reflects some aspect of their personae.
Sites for the Storied Journeys
The site of the 1989 phase of the study was my office in a
small private boarding high school in suburban Ontario. The office
was spacious and private, with windows looking out on the lush
well-manicured lawns of the campus. It was furnished with the
requisite large desk, upright chairs and filing cabinet. A plum
colored leather love-seata favored sitting area of most
participantswas tucked into a distant corner of the room.
To preserve anonymity, the interviews were conducted after schoolin
the early evening.
The sites for the two-meeting interview sessions in 1997 were
at locations within easy access to Eboni's and Silver's homes
in urban areas of eastern Canada. I chose an airport hotel suite
for the first segment of the session. They selected a park with
a spacious view of a children's playground for their second site.
I also observed them, as is discussed below, at a dinner we shared
and at brunch the next day. Jade, who was
visiting in the Berrien Springs area at the time of her 1997 interview,
chose my home for
her interview site.
My Role as Travel Coordinator
I am acutely aware of my privileged status as instrument, recorder,
and interpreter of the life events of these special women. As
co-researchers they have given me, in essence, the power to name
and control meaning in the bared segments of their personal narratives.
They granted me trust, and an entree into a field which at one
time was quite similar to theirs.
They may have granted me such trust because they were unconcerned
about being overheard by an academic audience (Powney & Watts,
1987). In their discourse prior to the 1989 interviews, the women
and their mothers assert that their openness stems from their
desire to enlighten the uninformed.
With that trust and openness comes a great responsibilitythe
need for the ethics of caring (Noddings, 1984), mutuality, and
responsive listening to avoid "filtered out" truths
(Mishler, 1986), and the urgent need to avoid the pitfalls of
"listening dangerously" (Rasi, 1997), a dominant force
in qualitative inquiry (Chase, 1995; Reinharz, 1994). Mindful
of Mishler's (1986) advice that rhetors need to be allowed to
tell their stories in their own way, I allowed them time to hold
the floor beyond the 30-second pause. I used my silence to give
them time and space to speak in their own voices, control the
flow of topics, and extend their responses. My silence equalized
the power balance.
Nel Noddings's (Witherell & Noddings, 1991) well-known thesis
is that the ethics of care involves the centrality of listening,
connecting and taking responsibility for the research relationship.
While noting that embedded in feminist biography are themes of
pain, dilemmas, and joy, Shulamit Reinharz (1994) posits that
care is demonstrated not only in the way the interview is handled,
but in the way women's ideas and lives are validated in a tradition
that once ignored the voice of women. Susan Chase (1995) cautions
that we pay special attention to participants' vulnerability and
analysts' interpretive authority.
As travel coordinator, I seek rigorous authenticity. This translates
as trustworthiness, the constructivist equivalent of internal
and external validity, reliability and objectivityterms
associated with veracity and fidelity (Barone, 1997, p. 222).
Lincoln and Guba (1985) unpack the term to reveal three essentials:
credibility, confirmability, and dependability. In turn, Garman
(1996) explains that these components answer the questions: Does
this ring true? Will the participants agree that it was said?
Can it be "judged within the context of the community of
scholars it represents" (p. 19).
As coordinator, I also function as interpreter. Denzin (1994)
describes the function. "The researcher, as a writer, is
a bricoleur. She fashions meaning and interpretation out of ongoing
experience. As a bricoleur, the researcher uses any tool or method
that is readily at hand" (p. 501).
In this case, my journal functioned as my tool for "experiencing
the experience" (Clandinin & Connelly, 1994), and producing
what David Plath (1990) describes as "filed notes."
Through reflexive journaling, I sought to make sense of the lived
experiences in the field by writing about it to myself first and
then to the readership of this text. "What is written down
is itself interpretive, for the researcher interprets while writing"
(Denzin, 1994, p. 505).
By writing, and then using this reflexive writing as a source
for the study, I present an insider's perspective on the language,
feelings, emotions, and actions of the women studied. I also bring
my particular and unique self to the text, tacitly claiming that
I have some authority in the subject matter being interpreted.
In this fashion, I function in a role somewhat similar to Sojourner Truth's at the Women's Rights meeting more than a century ago: "I am sittin' among you to watch; and every once in a while, I will come out and tell you what time of night it is" (cited in Cole, 1995, p. 155).
Data Sources
My data include the verbatim interview transcripts, E-mail
dialogues, and reflective journaling which I simultaneously produced
during each phase of the research processinterview, transcription,
and analysis. Interpretation was inevitable at this point (Connelly
& Clandinin, 1990), dotted the pages of my journals, and is
woven into the portraits presented in the following chapters.
Observational notes from the field as I conducted the interviews,
and memos tabulating phone and E-mail communication combine with
the interview transcripts to form the primary data sources.
The field work for the first phase of the study describes a 3-week
period during which nine high-school students were each interviewed
and recorded for a 2-hour period (Appendix C). The second phase
(1997/98) extends over an 11-month period. This is included as
a log of the interview schedules (Appendix D). But it is story,
the stuff of knowledge (Bateson, 1989), that provided the compass
to guide usthe participants and mein our collaborative
search for meaning.
Choosing Active In-depth Interviews to Find Meaning
A series of active, in-depth interviews form the basis of this study. The first interview (Appendix A)conducted 8 years prior to the secondestablished a "preliminary symptomatic reading" (Hollway & Jefferson, 1997) on the participant's reflections of their achievement as a function of four themes: the nature of their mother-daughter relationship; their fantasy visions in terms of educational, vocational, and social aspirations; the support networks to which they clung; and their perceptions of themselves as visibly different young women. In the second series, the interviews (Appendix B) became more collaborative. The young women worked more closely with me, both during and after the interviews to consider the linkages and horizons of meaning they shared with their narratives.
The function of the second set of interviews was to reaffirm and refine these linkages as we looked at them through different lensesones defined by developmental, social, and philosophical changes. As the study continued in 1997, the participants were asked to review their 1989 stories, and to discuss the critical points in their lived experience during the intervening years, 1989-1997.
The findings of the later interviews predominate in the study.
These interviews are loosely formulated around the women's storied
response to the research questions (cited in chapter 1) which
seek to uncover a description of success as mediated by maternal
support, social and educative contexts, and God-reliance, theme
which emerged during the1997 interviews. To proceed with the study
in 1997, I telephoned the three participants with whom I had maintained
loose informal contactthrough the occasional card, graduation
and/or wedding announcementsinviting them to continue to
participate in the rest of the study. When they accepted the invitation,
I sent them a letter of explanation defining the scope of the
study and the general nature of the interview, and sought their
signed consent to participate in this inquiry (Appendix F).
Prior to our meeting, I mailed to each of the three women, the
following items:
1. A copy of the 1989 transcript for review
2. A disposable camera, so that each woman could capture the essence
of her
success on film, and money to develop the film (Note: To maintain
confidentiality the
photographs were returned to each woman at the end of the final
interview.)
3. A stairway-to-success graphic (Appendix E) on which she could
chart her
successes, both realized and projected, before our meeting. The
participants had the option to wait until the interview to chart
their success during the interview. All three women chose that
option.
Connelly and Clandinin (1990) insist that to begin the process
of narrative inquiry,
all participants must have voice. These three strategiesthe
earlier transcript, the photographs, and the graphicprovided
the springboard for the stories that flowed to form the reservoir
of narratives for the study, triggered by a gentle probe, "Can
you tell me [more] about that?"
The participants identified benchmarks, external and internal,
which indicate progress to their self-identified goals, and storied
how they practiced improvisations (Bateson, 1989) along the way
to the success they now experience. Although the interviews were
conducted in two discreet stages, the data are treated here in
four chronological phases:
1. Their early childhood years as illustrated by the participants'
"retrospective
musings" (Peshkin, 1978).
2. The high-school years as defined by the1989 in-depth interviews.
3. The intermediate years, 1989 to 1997, as presented in the narrative
responses
to the cast-your-mind-back' questions.
4. The 1997 and 1998 years as captured by their self-selected
photographs portraying the essence of their personal success;
their responses to the questions about success I posed; their
definition of success as illustrated by their staircase of success
(Appendix E); the stories they share in the interviews; and the
follow-up sessions which were conducted on E-mail, by phone or
letter (Appendix D).
I explicitly encouraged narrative language as participants shared
first-person
accounts during the interviews. My questions sought to gain thick
description (Geertz, 1973) of the context of their stories. In
general, they were of the "Cast your mind back to . . . "
or "Tell me about it so that I can feel as if I was right
there with you" ilk.
The Paraverbal Interpretation
I produced verbatim transcripts of the taped collaborative interviews
myself (to ensure accuracy should participants choose to use the
dialect on occasion). My focus was on the voices, no longer edited
out or repressed by an unfriendly foreign power. I paid specific
attention to pauses, silence, omission, and exotic language, tuning
my auditory system to the sound of accents. I noted both the humor
and the person in the voice of the rhetor: child daughter, adult
daughter, eager student, career woman, wife, and/or mother.
I took particular care to be conscious of the latent or explicit
need for revision as the women mailed back to me the verbatim
transcription of their interviews with their corrections. I took
pains to listen for their choice of key words and unexpected phrases;
their deviant views and stories that captured the essence of each
woman. As I pored over transcripts, listened to their tapes, reflected,
journaled, and took the occasional collect call, I learned to
listen for implicit truth. I heard it in laughter, since truth
often follows on the heels of laughter. I learned to listen for
it in the silence of omission. I saw it in the revisions each
woman made during the interview or the verification of the transcript.
A Happy Accident
During the 1997 interview process I discovered that we all had
access to E-mail.
This was the perfect mode of communication for the "on-second-thought"
syndrome which was typical of the women in my study. The insights
which they shared when they used that medium were invaluable to
the study and added even more depth, through elaboration, to the
member check process. Their messages, most of which were lengthy
and carefully planned, are included in this study and analyzed
with the same care as were the interview transcripts.
Member Checks
Silverman (1993) insists "that good research goes back to
the subjects with tentative results, and refines them in the light
of the subjects' reactions" (p. 159). After the interviews
were completed, verbatim transcripts of the second set of taped
collaborative storying completed in 1997 were made, delivered
to the participants, and verified by them, as had been the case
in 1989.
Robert Stake (1995) describes this as the time when the rhetor,
whom he defines as the actor,
is asked to review the material for accuracy and palatability.
The actor may be encouraged to provide alternative language or
interpretation but is not promised that [her] version will appear
in the final report. Regularly some of that feedback is worthy
of inclusion. (p. 115)
Susan Chase (1995), speaking in her intentional feminist voice,
argues that member checks of interview transcripts do more than
satisfy the requirements of authenticity, it strengthens the researcher's
hold on the collaborative interpretive process because "it
breaks down the barrier between the researcher and researched.
It acknowledges that my research depends on your story and that
you have good reason to be particularly interested in what I have
to say about your story" (pp. 49, 50).
Portrait Presentations: Data Analysis and Interpretation
Once the transcripts were authenticated, they were shaped into
portrait presentations (Cline, 1996). These portraits are, in
a manner of speaking, miniature case studies framed in narrative.
In essence, these three portraits provide the contextual shape
for the datathe narratives displayed. Through this medium,
lived experience is presented and bound by emerging themes as
the women portray the benchmarks on their journey to success graphic.
Portraiture is a disciplined process of description, interpretation,
analysis, and synthesis. Sarah Lawrence-Lightfoot, an expert in
this methodology, points out the power of context and its changes:
As the researcher documents the contextrich with detailed
description, anticipatory themes and metaphors, and allusions
to history and evolution, she must remember that the context is
not static and the actors are not only shaped by the context,
but that they also give it shape. (Lawrence-Lightfoot, 1997, p.
57)
Because of the quantity of the data displayed, each portrait is
loosely divided into themes which emerged from the study and are
framed by the stories told in 1989 and 1997. An analysis of each
case study is developed throughout each chapter. Special attention
is given to two elementsthe content and emergent themes
of the various stories and emerging metaphors. Each portraiture
chapter includes a poem reflecting the essence of the young woman
as her story distilled it, her words shaped it, and my analytic
ear filtered it.
The Seed Story
While analyzing the women's life stories, I noticed that in their
telling they often revealed a germinal account which emerged in
early childhood and functioned as a metaphor for their lives,
clarifying the route they chose to take. This brief account, while
not necessarily life-changing, often stimulated retrospective
recognition as it depicts a hint of the promise of each participant's
persona. For the purposes of this paper, I define this minuscule
plot as a seed story.
The Search for Metaphor
Embedded in the contextual frame, metaphors capture the reader's
attention, call up powerful associations, and resonate through
the rest of the piece. These metaphors serve as overarching themes
and rich undercurrents that resound throughout the portrait. Like
seed stories, "the metaphors act as symbols pointing to larger
phenomena that will emerge as significant and be developed more
fully later on in the narrative" (Lawrence-Lightfoot, 1997,
p. 55).
As interpreter, I watch for metaphors as signposts to meaning.
"The metaphor," Lourdes Morales-Gudmusson insists, "piles
meaning on meaning, thus enriching not only our language, but
the way we see the world. And seeing the world as new is the greatest
contribution poetry and art can make to our lives" (1997,
p. 11).
Cross-Case Analysis: A Larger Portrait
Sharan Merriam (1988) insists that each case in a cross-case
analysis must first
be treated as a comprehensive case. She suggests, however, that
by increasing the number
of cases, one increases the potential for generalizing beyond
the particular case. "An
interpretation based on evidence from several cases can be more
compelling to a reader than results based on a single instance"
(p. 154). Miles and Huberman agree: "By comparing sites or
cases, one can establish the range of generality of a finding
or explanation, and at the same time, pin down the conditions
under which that finding will occur" (1984, p. 151).
Glaser and Strauss (1967, p. 55) noted that case studies should
highlight "both the
differences and similarities of data that bear on the categories
being studied." The data
uncovered in this work were analyzed to find parallel themes.
To preserve the integrity of the individual's contexts, however,
individual bits of raw data remain audible.
As the three cases were studied individually, units of meaning
were highlighted,
patterns detected, and themes clustered and subsequently color-coded. Ultimately the themes were compared and displayed in five word tables
Alternate Forms of Representation
About 60 years ago John Dewey excited the imagination of educational
practitioners and researchers with his book, Art as Experience.
His influence still permeates the field. He wrote:
Art throws off the covers that hide the expressiveness of experienced
things; it quickens us from the slackness of routine and enables
us to forget ourselves by finding ourselves in the delight of
experiencing the world about us in its varied qualities and forms.
It intercepts every shade of expressiveness found in objects and
orders them in a new experience of life. (1934, p. 104)
Eisner (1997b) followed his train of thought. He noted that
"exploring the potential of other forms of representation
for illuminating the educational worlds we wish to understand
is simply a symptom of a fertile imagination seeking to discover
its limits" (pp. 4, 5). In this study I used three forms
of arts-based representationsthe poetic transcription, the
playlet, and the graphic synthesisto portray the success
experiences, . and to stimulate the readers' imagination. Laurel
Richardson (1993) defines this as transgressive validity'.
She explains that transforming data from field text to research
text using alternate forms of representation exposes the truth
in a different wayintegrating the profession, political,
and personal at different levels. "I am not just talking
strategies, she asserts. "I'm showing them" (p. 697).
The research act thus takes on an entirely different light, and
engages multiple audiences, and persuades multiple readers. While
these forms are functions of the interpretive process, they are
also discussed here as products of the study.
The purpose of the alternative representations created in this
study is succinct and straight-forward. I want to engage readers
in making connections with rhetors whose stories are somehow similar
to theirs in time, place, culture, age, ethnicity, or dreams.
I aim to "cancel the distance between the reader and writer
and written about" (Lather, 1997, p. 254). It is a purpose
whose implementation is facilitated by the hours I spent listening
to the taped interviews, hearing the percussive force of their
telling, capturing their phrasing, their cadences, their silences,
and their style. Three forms are selected in this study because
of their capacity to trace, in different ways, the themes and
textual ambiguities that are embedded in the stories under study.
Poetic Transcriptions
"A poem is a potent form of communicating feelings, history,
and interpersonal dynamics of complex multicultural phenomena"
(Fukuyama & Reid, 1996, p. 83). Poetry, particularly free
verse, is a powerful tool for representing. Part of the power
of poetry is effected through its brevity and unusual juxtaposition
of images. It "cuts to the quick" of human struggles
for recognition (Lorde, 1984, p. 38).
Laurel Richardson (1994) appeals to social science researchers:
"Experiment with transforming an in-depth interview into
a poetic representation. Try using only the words, breath points,
pauses, syntax and diction of the speaker" (p. 526). While
entering the field in a path she cleared, I followed the tracks
Corinne Glesne (1997) generated when she designed the poetic transcription
after scrupulous attention to sorting and coding themes in her
interview data bank. Glesne suggests that poetic transcription
moves in the direction of poetry but is not necessarily poetry.
Its attraction to researchers lies in its power "to give
pleasure and truth" (p. 213).
The data representation used in this study also includes free-verse
poetic synthesescomposites of the complexities of the major
themes in all three women's journey stories. Implicit in the choice
of free verse is the tacit knowledge that art abides in the souls
of Black women (Wade-Gayles, 1995), and that there is power in
the in between spaces of unspoken text. The short free-verse poem
was also used as a collaborative research tool in this studya
type of member check. After analysis of each case and development
of the poem, I mailed each woman the verse I created for an accuracy
and palatability check. She responded by revising or validating
the piece. Using this genre reminds us that our stories need not
be bound by traditional or external rules of rhyming. The brevity
of the poems allowed for quick and cogent revision by the written
about and begs evaluative ruminations by an audience. Laurel Richardson
(1993) notes another function of the poetic transcription. "I
had in mind writing sociologies which displayed how meaning was
constructed, and which were helpful to people, and not boring"
(p. 698).
The Playlet
As I worked with varied literary forms and experimented with formatting
techniques during the transcription process, some scripts defined
themselves. As the language patterns and styles evolved, and the
multilevels of the speech acts emerged, I was struck by the tellers'
frequent dialogic style.
Since performance texts make experience concrete, I chose to work
with yet another form of representation. The text became a dramaturgical
script which creates spaces for the merging of "multiple
voices and experiences" (Conquergood, 1992, p. 10). It is,
as Coffey and Atkinson (1996) note, a rhetorical structure whose
juxtapositional function strengthens our understanding of the
essentials of the women's stories under study. Drama captures
and communicates the experience (Richardson, 1993).
Graphic Synthesis
The ability to grasp abstractions concretely in order to begin
to understand them as is the requisite of this study. It requires
"an enlightened eye; this is as true and important in understanding
and improving education as in creating a painting" (Eisner,
1991, p. 1).
The research questions are therefore answered, in part, through
the image/text balance of the oral history. This pastiche of visual
metaphors illuminates the meaning of each woman's journey toward
success. It illustrates both the similarities and uniqueness noted.
It is, in effect, a "sign complex', a set of visual
signifiers intent on representing data analyses that are usually
communicated in narrative form" (Radnofsky, 1996, p. 386).
It challenges presumption, disquiets, perplexes, and delights
(Stake, 1995).
Eisner's renowned interest in arts-based research (1997b) coupled
with my need for visuals as a spur to both my creative and critical
thinking triggered the development of a layered model. This model
is another portrayal' of the experience, with each portrayal
adding a layered understanding to the storied experience. It is
also designed to encourage the viewer to understand that visually
representing data is an interactive activity. It draws upon the
viewers' deep reflection of the data and my interpretation of
them.
The three forms of representation described here "work toward
a multiplicity and complexity of layers that unfold an event which
exceeds our frames of reference, evoking insight into what not
knowing means" (Lather, 1997, p. 254).
Summary
This arts-based interpretive study is designed to record the stories
of three successful women of color. It documents, through voiced
portrait presentations, their reflections on their definition
of, and progress toward, their own view of success. The study
traces, through narrative inquiry, the progress to their self-defined
objectives from early childhood to young adulthood. Focusing on
their trajectories of success, it plots their achievements and
the benchmarks of their past successes. It records their dreams
for their future.
The interview data were collected through observation, narrative
inquiry, reflexive restorying, and journaling. The data were shaped
into portrait presentations and stored separately. They were coded
thematically and interpreted through parallel and cross-
case analyses. Themes were displayed in word tables. Ultimately
they were represented in a triangulation of formsdramaturgical,
poetic, and visualto highlight and add depth to multiple
perspectives on the discourse. The alternate representations of
the narratives allow us to uncover the hidden assumptions of life.
Narrative emerged as both phenomenon and method (Clandinin &
Connelly, 1994) of this study. In the final analysis, it is narrative
which binds the values, goals, and syntheses of the study together,
ambushes the know-it-all, and brings meaning to this work. The
three forms of representation used to interpret the findings of
this study step outside the normative constraints for social science
writing. (Richardson, 1993) In-depth interview findings are transformed
into poetry; field notes turned into drama, and the essence of
the longitudinal study became an illustrated oral history.