Crawley2022

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Crawley2022
BibType ARTICLE
Key Crawley2022
Author(s) S. L. Crawley
Title Queering Doing Gender: The Curious Absence of Ethnomethodology in Gender Studies and in Sociology
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Gender, Theory, Sociology, Ethnomethodology, Race, Sexuality
Publisher
Year 2022
Language English
City
Month
Journal Sociological Theory
Volume 40
Number 4
Pages 366–392
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/07352751221134828
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

“Doing Gender,” Candance West and Don Zimmerman’s famous 1987 article, has become a folk concept—a trope or commonsense resource within the sociology of gender. Yet at the same time, most gender scholars overlook its ethnomethodological premise, visible in both poststructuralist misunderstandings of its argument outside the discipline of sociology and what I term a realist misunderstanding of it in the study of structures and identities within the discipline. Reading West and Zimmerman queerly while clarifying ethnomethodology’s ontology, I refocus attention for critical scholarship on ethnomethodology’s analytic sensibilities for research on gender, race, and sexuality, among other embodiments. Specifically, ethnomethodology reframes a vision of actors as relational, practical actors; repositions gender as accountable, jointly produced social relations, not individual identity; and foregrounds resistance in addition to conformity. Hence, my gender (race/class/sexuality) is not mine; it is ours. Ethnomethodology’s ontological shift in temporality to reality-in-production enables interpretive-materialism: a queer, anti-racist, intersectional sociology that is future-facing and in motion.

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