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Talk Is Cheap: Ethnography and the Attitudinal Fallacy

✍ Scribed by Jerolmack, C.; Khan, S.


Book ID
121812459
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Weight
253 KB
Volume
43
Category
Article
ISSN
0049-1241

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


This article examines the methodological implications of the fact that what people say is often a poor predictor of what they do. We argue that many interview and survey researchers routinely conflate self-reports with behavior and assume a consistency between attitudes and action. We call this erroneous inference of situated behavior from verbal accounts the attitudinal fallacy. Though interviewing and ethnography are often lumped together as β€œqualitative methods,” by juxtaposing studies of β€œculture in action” based on verbal accounts with ethnographic investigations, we show that the latter routinely attempts to explain the β€œattitude–behavior problem” while the former regularly ignores it. Because meaning and action are collectively negotiated and context-dependent, we contend that self-reports of attitudes and behaviors are of limited value in explaining what people actually do because they are overly individualistic and abstracted from lived experience.


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