Conroy2010

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Conroy2010
BibType ARTICLE
Key Conroy2010
Author(s) Tom Conroy
Title Culturally “Doped” or Not? On Ethnomethodology, Critical Theory and the Exegesis of Everyday Life Practices
Editor(s)
Tag(s) ethnomethodology, critical theory, everyday life, urban practices
Publisher
Year 2010
Language
City
Month
Journal Environment, Space, Place
Volume 2
Number 1
Pages 61–79
URL Link
DOI 10.7761/ESP.2.1.61
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Everyday life as a sociological/philosophical concept is widely considered to be both a familiar and yet taken-for-granted subject matter for analytic investigation. In considering the works of three leading scholars, Michel de Certeau, Harold Garfinkel, and John Fiske, one can look toward possible referents to this term. Starting with Certeau’s critical semiotics of the everyday, with its emphasis on such distinctions as place and space as well as strategies and tactics, the everyday can be theorized in terms of contrasts between discourse and practice. Similarly, with Garfinkel’s ethnomethodological emphasis on the practical actor and Fiske’s ethnographic and cultural studies emphasis on local meaning, the everyday can be conceptualized in terms of distinctions between lived order and a theorized version of the everyday. By examining the approaches of these three scholars as well as drawing upon a visual examination of everyday urban scenes, the article concludes with an affirmation of a multi-conceptual and methodological approach to the everyday and with recognition of the everyday as a signifier loaded with a multitude of possibly overlapping meanings.

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