Doing it Differently: Engaging Interview Participants with Imaginative Variation

Article

Doing it Differently: Engaging Interview Participants with Imaginative Variation

Published in: Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology
Volume 16 , issue 1-2 , 2016 , pages: 153–162
DOI: 10.1080/20797222.2016.1145873
Author(s): Emma L. Turley Senior Lecturer in Psychology, UK , Surya Monro Associate Professor of Sociology and Social Policy, UK , Nigel King Professor of Applied Psychology, UK

Abstract

The phenomenological technique of imaginative variation was identified by Husserl (1936/1970) as conducive to elucidating the manner in which phenomena appear to consciousness. In brief, by engaging in the phenomenological reduction and using imaginative variation, phenomenologists are able to describe the experience of consciousness, having stepped outside of the natural attitude through the epoché. Imaginative variation is a stage aimed at explicating the structures of experience more distinctively, and is best described as a mental experiment. Features of the experience are imaginatively altered in order to view the phenomenon under investigation from varying perspectives. Husserl envisaged this process as ultimately definitive of the essential elements of an experience, as only those aspects that are invariant to the experience of the phenomenon will not be able to change through the variation.

Get new issue alerts for Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology