This book revisits the arguments by which Harvey Sacks and Harold Garfinkel opposed the widespread attempt in the social sciences to construct disciplinary theories and methods in place of common-sense knowledge of human action, and proposed instead an alternative that would investigate the organised methods of natural language use and common-sense reasoning that constitute social orders - arguments that led to the establishment and proliferation of ethnomethodology and conversation analysis.

As the very "constructive analysis" that they opposed has begun to be incorporated into influential lines of research in ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, the authors return to the founding insights of the field and reiterate the importance of Garfinkel and Sacks' original and controversial proposals for an "alternate" sociology of practical action and practical reasoning. Showing how constructive analysis has become entrenched in ethnomethodology and conversation analysis and arguing for a need to "re-boot" these approaches, this volume constitutes a call for a renewal of the radical alternative proposed by Garfinkel and Sacks.



Autorentext

Graham Button is former Professor and Pro-Vice Chancellor for Arts, Computing, Engineering and Science at Sheffield Hallam University, and Laboratory Director of the Xerox Research Centre Europe.

Michael Lynch is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Science & Technology Studies at Cornell University, USA.

Wes Sharrock is Professor in the Department of Sociology at Manchester University, UK.



Inhalt

Preface

Introduction

Part I: Foundations: Garfinkel, Sacks and an Alternate Sociology

Chapter One: On Formal Structures of Practical Action

Chapter Two: Sequential Analysis as an Investigation of Formal Structures of Practical Action

Chapter Three: Ethnomethodological Studies of Work

Part II: Conversation Analysis

Chapter Four: Autonomous Structures of Conversational Actions

Chapter Five: Technical and Vernacular Description

Part III: Studies of Work and Organisational Contexts

Chapter Six: Institutional Talk

Chapter Seven: Workplace and Work Practice Studies

Part IV: Normalising EMCA

Chapter Eight: Importing Constructive Analytic Theory and Method

Chapter Nine: The Problem with Collections

Chapter Ten: A Case Study: Apologies and Constructive Analysis

Chapter Eleven: Conclusion

References

Titel
Ethnomethodology, Conversation Analysis and Constructive Analysis
Untertitel
On Formal Structures of Practical Action
EAN
9781000652857
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
23.09.2022
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Anzahl Seiten
316