Transcribed Interview with Wade Davis and Peter Gzowski
Transcribed Interview with Wade Davis and Peter Gzowski (18:00)
Intro:
For centuries, fantastic
stories have emanated from Haiti about voodoo ritual, about people being raised
from the dead, and mysterious secret societies. Wade Davis is a Canadian
student at Harvard, spent a couple of years in Haiti, trying to uncover the
truth behind the stories of voodoo and zombies. The results of his
investigation are in his new book “The Serpent and the Rainbow” and he joins me
this morning in the studio, good morning, Wade…
Question 1 (explore researcher’s paradigm and
intention):
Tell me what you set out to
do? Is this essentially an academic exercise or an exercise in adventure writing?
Follow up: But
I’m thinking as you came back and started to sort through your materials, it is
assembled so much, it begins so much like a good old thrilling adventure, you
must have been aware of that as you were writing… it starts like a movie…
Question 2 (learn external reasons):
Why did the academic
community generally think of … there was some evidence that, there were some
stories that peaked their interest, and you got asked to go down there, outline
what they thought was going on there…
Question 3 (introduce research case):
Give me the Narcisse case,
you’ve become so familiar with this now…
Follow up:
This guy had died! ...And
they had all his symptoms, they knew that he had turned blue, and they knew all
this stuff about him…and in 1980 here comes this guy
So they get Wade, the
ethno-botanist and they said you go down there and see if there are drugs that
can do this, right?
Question 4 (learn researcher’s experience):
And tell me know, how do you
go, because you hadn’t been to Haiti before, you had done a lot of travelling,
you kicked around the world a lot, in the jungles of South America, just take
me to Haiti with you, because you go right there, you get awfully quickly to
things that are going on
Question 5 (learn about technical research):
I want to talk a little bit
about the drug, because your scholarship really shows up in the book as you go
through, you have obviously read all the literature on all of the drugs, and
it’s fascinating because it’s half romance and it’s half science. I’m really
over-simplifying and you can straighten me out pharmacologically here but here
you boil a toad, right, you get, what you get is not just boiled toad but there
are secretions and certain kinds of toads that poisonous you talk about the
blowfish which we all know you don’t eat the blowfish or the puffer fish
because it hurts your [stomach], but it also turns out that it knocks you down
and the chemistry is solid here
Follow up:
Was it [tetrodotoxin] 350
thousand times as powerful as cocaine?
I knew there was a giant
figure there
Question 6 (learn about social aspects of research):
You said that as you were
talking about it in the morning, and this is also evident in the book, you say
that there is some certain community assumptions, and that really boils down to
if you don’t believe in this, it doesn’t work
Question 7 (learn about social aspects of research): Would you be able to hypothetical, and because you
didn’t witness this, but you have put together a lot of evidence… tell me what
could happen in a village where a guy gets out of line, and the guy is going to
zombie him
Follow up:
You could knock someone down
so far that they’re breathing and…
Question 8 (learn about social aspects of research):
To what extent do you buy
the hypothesis of a secret society or a set of secret society that has access
to this information and with the threat of turning you into a zombie if you
against what they are doing in your community, because this is a, the book is
very much about Haiti and this history of Haiti and the darkness of that
society, do you buy the existence of the secret society?
Follow up: What
about bringing the people back, what about coming back from the zombie…
Question 9 (researcher’s insights):
Is there any quick easy
handy lesson for modern medicine out of your discoveries, because you have
confirmed something, and you did talk about the…
Conclusion: Thank
you very much, Wade Davis is the Author of the Serpent and the Rainbow...
Reflection
The interview with Wade
Davis was exploratory and a dialogue, but with very clear objectives.
Specifically, the themes explored in the interview are:
1)
Researcher’s
paradigm and intentions (Question 1)
2)
External reasons
for the research (Question 2)
3)
Researcher’s
experience (Question 4)
4)
Learning about
the research (Question 3, 5, 6,7, 8)
5)
Researcher’s
insights (Question 9)
It is clear that Peter
Gzowski did his research on the topic. The format was based on questions that
were open-ended, such that they allowed Wade Davis to answer freely, but still
provided specific parameters or scope of inquiry. For example, the first
question: “Tell me what you set out to do? Is this essentially an academic
exercise or an exercise in adventure writing?” Although the question is open
ended, Peter Gzowski set the parameters by first introducing the general topic
(the research on voodoo in Haiti, and the book resulting from the research).
Secondly, he limited the answer to options – academic or adventure writing.
The interview was a set of
questions, but also at times conversational. The interviewer achieved a more
conversational format by asking follow up questions from the interviewee’s
answer or reaffirming or adding to what the interviewee was saying. Based on my transcribing of the interview, I
interpreted 9 questions (and 9 follow up questions or comments) out of the 18 times
Peter Gzowski spoke.
The interviewer was able to
guide the interviewee through the general “planned” direction of his interview
by leading into related, yet different questions. For example, after the first
question and follow up (which was more directed to the Wade Davis’ personal experience),
the interviewer then asked a question external to the interviewee (that is, the
academic community’s reason for researching this topic).
I particularly liked when
Peter Gzowski asked Wade Davis situational questions, such as “Take me to Haiti
with you…” (Question 4) or “…what could happen in a village…” (Question 7)
because these questions give the reader/ listener a personal experience that
could be easier to understand and empathize with.
Hi Naureen,
ReplyDeleteThank you for your nice summary and reflection on this interview. I really like the question reflection you summarized. It provided a clear outline of the interview. I think it is quite common that the interviewer would like to give some open-ended questions to the interviewer, since it is easy to let the interviewee to tell more details about the topic. In addition, it is wise that the interviewer prepared a plan before he or she start the interview, so that the interviewer won't be led by others and will give audiences a clear outline. I am also impressed by the question such as “Take me to Haiti with you…” , it is quite useful to let interviewee feel closed with the interviewer.
Crystal