Difference between revisions of "RJAnderson2022"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Robert J. Anderson; |Title=Research activities and professional practices |Tag(s)=EMCA; |Key=RJAnderson2022 |Year=2022 |Language=English...")
 
 
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|Language=English
 
|Language=English
 
|Journal=Ethnographic Studies
 
|Journal=Ethnographic Studies
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|Volume=19
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|Pages=114-125
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|URL=https://zenodo.org/record/7637976#.Y-uQYHbMJaQ
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|DOI=10.5281/zenodo.7637976
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|Note=Originally published as: Anderson, Robert. 1977. ‘Research Activities and Professional Practices’. Analytic Sociology 1 (1): F10–G03.
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|Abstract=Context
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If I remember rightly (and these days that is anything but guaranteed), this piece was written in the dog days of late summer 1976. It was an exciting time to be coming new to Ethnomethodology and especially in Manchester. The Department was extremely lively with the
 +
Ethno contingent led by Wes (Sharrock) and John (Lee) of course. Jeff Coulter and Rod
 +
Watson were also on the staff as were sympathetic colleagues such as Peter Martin and
 +
Martyn Hammersley. Graduate students included Doug Benson, Graham Button, Ted Cuff,
 +
Dave Francis, Christian Heath and many others. Garfinkel either recently had been or was
 +
about to be a Simon Fellow, Sacks had visited a few years earlier and Gail Jefferson, George
 +
Psathas and Don Zimmerman were soon to arrive. Regular visitors were people like John
 +
Heritage and Paul Drew.
 +
That summer I had handed in my MA Thesis, changed jobs, moved house and was casting around for a PhD topic. In addition, June and July were swallowed up with the ‘A’ Level
 +
marking I did at that time. The effects of all these distractions show in the paper. Not only is it a very preliminary draft (more notes really), the original is very rough. I have smoothed a few of the clumsiest sentences and removed many repetitious terms and phrases but, given Alex’s reasons for wanting to republish it, I have left the analysis in its original clunky state.
 +
One thing did strike me though. The paper represents, I think, my first dip into the possibilities thrown up by adopting Ethnomethodology’s investigative stance to Professional Sociology’s working practices—a topic which has haunted me on and off ever since!
 
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Latest revision as of 04:40, 22 July 2023

RJAnderson2022
BibType ARTICLE
Key RJAnderson2022
Author(s) Robert J. Anderson
Title Research activities and professional practices
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA
Publisher
Year 2022
Language English
City
Month
Journal Ethnographic Studies
Volume 19
Number
Pages 114-125
URL Link
DOI 10.5281/zenodo.7637976
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Context If I remember rightly (and these days that is anything but guaranteed), this piece was written in the dog days of late summer 1976. It was an exciting time to be coming new to Ethnomethodology and especially in Manchester. The Department was extremely lively with the Ethno contingent led by Wes (Sharrock) and John (Lee) of course. Jeff Coulter and Rod Watson were also on the staff as were sympathetic colleagues such as Peter Martin and Martyn Hammersley. Graduate students included Doug Benson, Graham Button, Ted Cuff, Dave Francis, Christian Heath and many others. Garfinkel either recently had been or was about to be a Simon Fellow, Sacks had visited a few years earlier and Gail Jefferson, George Psathas and Don Zimmerman were soon to arrive. Regular visitors were people like John Heritage and Paul Drew. That summer I had handed in my MA Thesis, changed jobs, moved house and was casting around for a PhD topic. In addition, June and July were swallowed up with the ‘A’ Level marking I did at that time. The effects of all these distractions show in the paper. Not only is it a very preliminary draft (more notes really), the original is very rough. I have smoothed a few of the clumsiest sentences and removed many repetitious terms and phrases but, given Alex’s reasons for wanting to republish it, I have left the analysis in its original clunky state. One thing did strike me though. The paper represents, I think, my first dip into the possibilities thrown up by adopting Ethnomethodology’s investigative stance to Professional Sociology’s working practices—a topic which has haunted me on and off ever since!

Notes

Originally published as: Anderson, Robert. 1977. ‘Research Activities and Professional Practices’. Analytic Sociology 1 (1): F10–G03.