Difference between revisions of "Garfinkel2006"

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|BibType=BOOK
 
|BibType=BOOK
 
|Author(s)=Harold Garfinkel;
 
|Author(s)=Harold Garfinkel;
|Title=Seeing sociologically: the routine grounds of social action.
+
|Title=Seeing Sociologically: The Routine Grounds of Social Action
 
|Editor(s)=Anne Warfield Rawls;
 
|Editor(s)=Anne Warfield Rawls;
|Tag(s)=Ethnomethodology;
+
|Tag(s)=Ethnomethodology; EMCA; Garfinkel
 
|Key=Garfinkel2006
 
|Key=Garfinkel2006
 
|Publisher=Paradigm Publishers
 
|Publisher=Paradigm Publishers
 
|Year=2006
 
|Year=2006
 
|Address=Boulder, CO
 
|Address=Boulder, CO
 +
|URL=https://www.routledge.com/Seeing-Sociologically-The-Routine-Grounds-of-Social-Action/Garfinkel-Rawls-Lemert/p/book/9781594510939
 
|Note=Edited and introduced by Anne Warfield Rawls
 
|Note=Edited and introduced by Anne Warfield Rawls
 +
|Abstract=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.
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 09:49, 13 November 2019

Garfinkel2006
BibType BOOK
Key Garfinkel2006
Author(s) Harold Garfinkel
Title Seeing Sociologically: The Routine Grounds of Social Action
Editor(s) Anne Warfield Rawls
Tag(s) Ethnomethodology, EMCA, Garfinkel
Publisher Paradigm Publishers
Year 2006
Language
City Boulder, CO
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages
URL Link
DOI
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

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.

Notes

Edited and introduced by Anne Warfield Rawls