Title of article :
Positioning Theory and the Negotiation of Information
Needs in a Clinical Midwifery Setting
Author/Authors :
Pamela J. McKenzie، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Studies of everyday life information seeking have begun
to attend to incidental forms of information behavior,
and this more inclusive understanding of information
seeking within broader social practices invites a constructionist
analytical paradigm. Positioning theory is a
constructionist framework that has proven useful for
studying the ways in which interactional practices contribute
to information seeking. Positions can construct
individuals or groups of people in ways that have real
effects on their information seeking. This article identifies
some specific types of discursive positioning and
shows how participants in a clinical care setting position
themselves and one another in ways that justify different
forms of information seeking and giving. Examples are
drawn from an ongoing study of information seeking in
prenatal midwifery encounters. The data consist of audio
recordings of nine prenatal midwifery visits and of 18
follow-up interviews, one with each participating midwife
and pregnant woman. The midwifery model of care
is based on a relationship in which the midwife provides
the pregnant woman with information and support necessary
for making informed decisions about her care.
Midwife–client interactions are therefore an ideal context
for studying information seeking and giving in a
clinical encounter.
Journal title :
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Journal title :
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology