Chapter 9. The dynamics of identity struggle in interdisciplinary meetings in higher education
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Seongsook Choi
Abstract
In response to shifts in requirements for research funding, interest in interdisciplinary engagement has burgeoned, but as yet the interactional dynamics of interdisciplinary meetings have received almost no attention. This chapter draws on a data set of over 20 hours of audio-recorded talk from 12 different interdisciplinary meetings involving biologists, mathematicians, bioinformaticians and statisticians. Drawing on a combination of applied conversation analysis and quantitative analysis (using the Interactional Discourse Lab developed by one of the authors), it explicates the ways in which disciplinary identities are deployed in the reconciliation of different perspectives on shared problems. In interdisciplinary engagement, the interactive and contingently accomplished process of identity construction is mediated by reference to epistemic rights associated with disciplinary membership, and while there is assumed parity of disciplinary entitlement, in practice the power of a dominant discipline can be invoked by relevant participants in order to establish epistemic precedence.
Abstract
In response to shifts in requirements for research funding, interest in interdisciplinary engagement has burgeoned, but as yet the interactional dynamics of interdisciplinary meetings have received almost no attention. This chapter draws on a data set of over 20 hours of audio-recorded talk from 12 different interdisciplinary meetings involving biologists, mathematicians, bioinformaticians and statisticians. Drawing on a combination of applied conversation analysis and quantitative analysis (using the Interactional Discourse Lab developed by one of the authors), it explicates the ways in which disciplinary identities are deployed in the reconciliation of different perspectives on shared problems. In interdisciplinary engagement, the interactive and contingently accomplished process of identity construction is mediated by reference to epistemic rights associated with disciplinary membership, and while there is assumed parity of disciplinary entitlement, in practice the power of a dominant discipline can be invoked by relevant participants in order to establish epistemic precedence.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Dedication v
- Table of contents vii
- Acknowledgements xi
- Chapter 1. Introduction 1
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Part I. Struggling to construct professional competence
- Chapter 2. Coping with uncertainty 21
- Chapter 3. Constructing a “competent” meeting chair 39
- Chapter 4. Juggling “I”s and “we”s with “he”s and “she”s 57
- Chapter 5. Epistemic “Struggles” 79
- Chapter 6. Who’s the expert? 95
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Part II. Struggling to (de-)construct in-group membership
- Chapter 7. You’re a proper tradesman mate 127
- Chapter 8. Indian women at work 147
- Chapter 9. The dynamics of identity struggle in interdisciplinary meetings in higher education 165
- Chapter 10. Laughables as a resource for foregrounding shared knowledge and shared identities in intercultural interactions in Scandinavia 185
- Chapter 11. Workplace conflicts as (re)source for analysing identity struggles in stories told in interviews 207
- Chapter 12. Identities on a learning curve 225
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Part III. Struggling to combine (sometimes competing) expectations
- Chapter 13. Managing patients’ expectations in telephone complaints in Scotland 243
- Chapter 14. Identity work in nurse-client interactions in selected community hospitals in Kenya 263
- Chapter 15. ‘Even if there were procedures, we will be acting at our own discretion…’ 281
- Chapter 16. A kind of work 299
- Chapter 17. Adapting self for private and public audiences 317
- Chapter 18. “I speak French=eh” 335
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Part IV. Struggling to define identity boundaries
- Chapter 19. The discursive accomplishment of identity during veterinary medical consultations in the UK 355
- Chapter 20. Embracing a new professional identity 371
- Chapter 21. Identity and space 387
- Chapter 22. Household workers’ use of directives to negotiate their professional identity in Lima, Peru 407
- Chapter 23. ‘We’re only here to help’ 427
- Chapter 24. Epilogue 445
- Index 455
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Dedication v
- Table of contents vii
- Acknowledgements xi
- Chapter 1. Introduction 1
-
Part I. Struggling to construct professional competence
- Chapter 2. Coping with uncertainty 21
- Chapter 3. Constructing a “competent” meeting chair 39
- Chapter 4. Juggling “I”s and “we”s with “he”s and “she”s 57
- Chapter 5. Epistemic “Struggles” 79
- Chapter 6. Who’s the expert? 95
-
Part II. Struggling to (de-)construct in-group membership
- Chapter 7. You’re a proper tradesman mate 127
- Chapter 8. Indian women at work 147
- Chapter 9. The dynamics of identity struggle in interdisciplinary meetings in higher education 165
- Chapter 10. Laughables as a resource for foregrounding shared knowledge and shared identities in intercultural interactions in Scandinavia 185
- Chapter 11. Workplace conflicts as (re)source for analysing identity struggles in stories told in interviews 207
- Chapter 12. Identities on a learning curve 225
-
Part III. Struggling to combine (sometimes competing) expectations
- Chapter 13. Managing patients’ expectations in telephone complaints in Scotland 243
- Chapter 14. Identity work in nurse-client interactions in selected community hospitals in Kenya 263
- Chapter 15. ‘Even if there were procedures, we will be acting at our own discretion…’ 281
- Chapter 16. A kind of work 299
- Chapter 17. Adapting self for private and public audiences 317
- Chapter 18. “I speak French=eh” 335
-
Part IV. Struggling to define identity boundaries
- Chapter 19. The discursive accomplishment of identity during veterinary medical consultations in the UK 355
- Chapter 20. Embracing a new professional identity 371
- Chapter 21. Identity and space 387
- Chapter 22. Household workers’ use of directives to negotiate their professional identity in Lima, Peru 407
- Chapter 23. ‘We’re only here to help’ 427
- Chapter 24. Epilogue 445
- Index 455