Seeing Sociologically

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A01=Anne Rawls
A01=Charles C. Lemert
A01=Harold Garfinkel
Animal Symbolicum
Author_Anne Rawls
Author_Charles C. Lemert
Author_Harold Garfinkel
Background Expectancies
Background Expectations
Bentley College
Category=JH
cognitive
Cognitive Style
Conversational Sequencing
empirical social research
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
guard
Husserl's Views
Husserl’s Views
Incongruity Types
Intended Object
interaction analysis
library
Library Guard
Make Up
Mutual Engagement
nite
Nite Province
Parsonian paradigm
phenomenological approaches in American sociology
phenomenological sociology
Post-experimental Interview
Postexperimental Interview
Pre-experimental Period
Pre-experimental Program
present
province
qualitative sociological methods
Recognizable Orders
Routine Grounds
sick
Sick Soldiers
social theory methodology
soldiers
style
Systematic References
Thesis Problems
Transformation Schemes
vivid
Vivid Present

Product details

  • ISBN 9781594510939
  • Weight: 317g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2005
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book-never before published-is eminent sociologist Harold Garfinkel's earliest attempt, while at Harvard in 1948, to bridge the growing gap in American sociology. This gap was generated by a Parsonian paradigm that emphasised a scientific approach to sociological description, one that increasingly distanced itself from social phenomena in the increasingly influential ways studied by phenomenologists. It was Garfinkel's idea that phenomenological description, rendered in more empirical and interactive terms, might remedy shortcomings in the reigning Parsonian view. Garfinkel soon gave up the attempt to repair scientific description, and his focus became increasingly empirical until, in 1954, he famously coined the term "Ethnomethodology." However, in this early manuscript can be seen more clearly than in some of his later work the struggle with a conceptual and positivist rendering of social relations that ultimately informed Garfinkel's position. Here we find the sources of his turn toward ethnomethodology, which would influence subsequent generations of sociologists. Essential reading for all social theory scholars and graduate students and for a wider range of social scientists in anthropology, ethnomethodology, and other fields.
Harold Garfinkel, Anne Rawls, Charles C. Lemert