Archive for March 7th, 2011

March 7, 2011

Ghost Hunting Interview Schedule

So, here are the interviews I have lined up so far. Specific times and places soon to follow:

In-person:

Tracey, whose house is full of paranormal activity, has agreed to let me come to the house to conduct the interview.  We’re trying to nail down a specific day and time, but I’m really looking forward to getting the perspective of someone who has always experienced the and is not a professional in the field.  I think my final piece will be written from this rather than from a professional’s viewpoint.

Lee Perley, manager of The Ghost Hunter Store and member of the South Jersey Ghost Research group, just emailed back yesterday agreeing to be interviewed.  We are also trying to set up a time and place to conduct the interview; I think it might be best to conduct the interview in the store, so we’ll both be comfortable in our surroundings.

Online:

Jen, @Ghost_PI_Jen on Twitter and the EVP and equipment specialist for The Ghost Guys, has been chatting with me for the past several weeks, and said she’d be more than happy to tell me about her experiences as a paranormal investigator, especially the audio evidence she’s been able to collect.

I’m currently looking for one final person to interview online; I’m hoping one of the actual Ghost Guys will be willing to talk to me about their experiences and their new show they are trying to launch.

I’m excited now that things are finally coming together.  More posts soon to follow on each individual interview within the next couple of weeks!

March 7, 2011

Field Research: Navigating Uncharted Waters

Last Tuesday’s Core 2 class dealt mostly with updating everyone on our research process and discussing the results of our excursion out to the bowling alley the week before (see previous post, Core 2 Heads to the Bowling Alley, for an in-depth look at my fieldnotes and transcription).

We also discussed several of the transcription methods covered in Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes by Robert . Emerson, Rachel I. Fretz, and Linda L. Shaw.  An ethnographer’s task, through “a deeper immersion in other’s world,” is to discover the fluidity of other’s lives and enhance his sensitivity to interaction and process” (p. 2), and then present his experiences in a way others can easily understand through fieldnote transcritions.  In order to produce an engaging and detailed  transcription, it is necessary for the ethnographer to take detailed and extensive fieldnotes of their observations and experiences that “reconstruct each moment from selected details which they remembered or had jotted down” (p. 67).

The trip to the bowling alley also gave me the opportunity to practice my interviewing skills, which as I mentioned in Building Bridges: A Guide to Postmodern Interviewing, I was concerned about.  I strived to keep my nerves in check and just chat with the bowlers rather than grill them for the information I needed in order to complete my assignment, and I was able to balance between actively observing what was happening around me while interacting with the environment as well.

Now comes the real test as I plan more trips and interviews (a schedule of people and places for the interviews to follow) for my ghost hunting research.  The bowling alley was a trial run, and now the real investigation is taking shape.  Wish me luck!