“Winning a battle, but losing the war”: contested identities, narratives, and interaction in asylum interviews
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Bjørghild Kjelsvik
Bjørghild Kjelsvik holds a PhD in linguistics on communities of practice and learning interaction in Cameroon (2008, University of Oslo). She had a postdoctoral fellowship in a project investigating identity in migrant narratives in 2009–2012. Her research interests include: oral narrative analysis, genres, intertexuality, discourse analysis, and cognitive linguistics. Current occupation is revising a Norwegian dictionary. Address for correspondence: Department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies, B.P. 1102 Blindern, 0317 Oslo, Norway 〈bjorghild.kjelsvik@ iln.uio.no 〉.
Abstract
Drawing on how divergent discourse frames can lead to contests of how and what to tell in institutional autobiographical narration, this article presents data from a Norwegian asylum interview. Institutional interviewing is basically an information-sharing endeavor; the interviewer aims to get information on the situation of the interviewee in order to establish how to deal with his or her case, framing the discourse as truthful, in contrast to other discourses of innocence and morality. The outcome depends very much on the interviewee's ability and willingness to share relevant information on his or her case. The interactional dynamics of the interviews must be considered in order to achieve an understanding of what identities are constructed by the participants. Intertextuality plays an important role in the analysis. In the interplay between elicited accounts and interactional processes, meanings and identities are negotiated and resisted in narrative discourse as part of the encounter between the interviewing officer, the interpreter, and the asylum applicant, within the social practice of asylum procedures. Finally, the need for further in-depth analyses of such interviews is pointed out.
About the author
Bjørghild Kjelsvik holds a PhD in linguistics on communities of practice and learning interaction in Cameroon (2008, University of Oslo). She had a postdoctoral fellowship in a project investigating identity in migrant narratives in 2009–2012. Her research interests include: oral narrative analysis, genres, intertexuality, discourse analysis, and cognitive linguistics. Current occupation is revising a Norwegian dictionary. Address for correspondence: Department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies, B.P. 1102 Blindern, 0317 Oslo, Norway 〈bjorghild.kjelsvik@ iln.uio.no〉.
©[2014] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Equivocation and doublespeak in far right-wing discourse: an analysis of Nick Griffin's performance on BBC's Question Time
- “So what's a year in a lifetime so.” Non-prefatory use of so in native and learner English
- Food talk: a window into inequality among university students
- Reported client–practitioner conversations as assessment in mental health practitioners' talk
- “Winning a battle, but losing the war”: contested identities, narratives, and interaction in asylum interviews