Article, 2024

Reviewing and problematizing methods and analytical strategies of discourse analysis in sport, exercise, and physical education studies

International Review for the Sociology of Sport, ISSN 1012-6902, Volume 59, 2, Pages 298-317, 10.1177/10126902231200369

Contributors

Sveinson K. [1] Wagner U. 0000-0001-7749-4975 (Corresponding author) [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Massachusetts
  2. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];
  3. [2] University of Copenhagen
  4. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

The field of sport, exercise, and physical education studies continues to utilize and strives to enhance rigor in qualitative approaches. We build upon this work by narrowing a focus to appropriately applying rigorous discourse analysis (DA). Though variations of DA have been increasingly incorporated into sport, exercise, and physical education studies, a comprehensive overview specifically covering which methods underpin DA and which analytical strategies are adopted is missing. Therefore, we conducted a structured scoping review by identifying 1810 papers from journal and database searches from 2000 to April 2022, then narrowed the sample to 560 papers that specifically conducted a DA. The review focuses on studies and practices within Foucauldian Discourse Analysis, Critical Discourse Analysis, and Discursive Psychology. By adopting a problematizing approach, we critically question taken-for-granted practices of DA, and through our synthesis, we argue that uses of DA tend to be organized around three archetypes: as a method detached from theoretical origin, as a lens with less emphasis on methodological description by primarily utilizing theory to contextualize and interpret insights, and as a path where theory and methods overlap with appropriate methodological descriptions focusing on textual analysis.

Keywords

Language, interviewing, post-structuralism, problematizing, qualitative methodology, rigor

Data Provider: Elsevier