Difference between revisions of "Garfinkel2019a"

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|BibType=BOOK
 
|BibType=BOOK
 
|Author(s)=Harold Garfinkel;
 
|Author(s)=Harold Garfinkel;
|Title=The History of Gulfport Field 1942
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|Title=The History of Gulfport Field 1942, Part II: The Aircraft Mechanics School
 
|Editor(s)=Tristan Thielmann
 
|Editor(s)=Tristan Thielmann
|Tag(s)=EMCA;
+
|Tag(s)=EMCA; World War II; Military; Aircraft
 
|Key=Garfinkel2019a
 
|Key=Garfinkel2019a
 
|Publisher=Media of Cooperation
 
|Publisher=Media of Cooperation
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|Language=English
 
|Language=English
 
|Address=Siegen
 
|Address=Siegen
|ISBN=978-3000638183
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|ISBN=978-3-00-063818-3
 
|Abstract=This volume makes available for the first time an unpublished report of wartime research, titled „The History of Gulfport Field 1942“, written by Harold Garfinkel, for the US Army Air Forces (AAF) in 1943. The report has both historical and sociological significance. It has value as a historical document that presents in great detail how AAF personnel involved in training aircraft mechanics at one site (Gulfport Field, Mississippi) managed to contend with the rapid construction and deployment of training necessitated by World War II, with its accompanying shortages of material and experienced trainers, and surpluses of persons to be trained. In the face of shortages, AAF commanders adopted a set of practical aims for the school that downplayed the importance of conventional instruction and relied more on „hands on“ practice and „the will to win“. This strategy emphasized a priority of practice over theory that is particularly relevant to the development of Garfinkel’s program of ethnomethodology, his later hybrid studies of work and science, and their relationship to debates in sociology. The book contains a 48-page afterword by Michael Lynch and Anne Rawls.
 
|Abstract=This volume makes available for the first time an unpublished report of wartime research, titled „The History of Gulfport Field 1942“, written by Harold Garfinkel, for the US Army Air Forces (AAF) in 1943. The report has both historical and sociological significance. It has value as a historical document that presents in great detail how AAF personnel involved in training aircraft mechanics at one site (Gulfport Field, Mississippi) managed to contend with the rapid construction and deployment of training necessitated by World War II, with its accompanying shortages of material and experienced trainers, and surpluses of persons to be trained. In the face of shortages, AAF commanders adopted a set of practical aims for the school that downplayed the importance of conventional instruction and relied more on „hands on“ practice and „the will to win“. This strategy emphasized a priority of practice over theory that is particularly relevant to the development of Garfinkel’s program of ethnomethodology, his later hybrid studies of work and science, and their relationship to debates in sociology. The book contains a 48-page afterword by Michael Lynch and Anne Rawls.
 
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Latest revision as of 04:13, 27 April 2020

Garfinkel2019a
BibType BOOK
Key Garfinkel2019a
Author(s) Harold Garfinkel
Title The History of Gulfport Field 1942, Part II: The Aircraft Mechanics School
Editor(s) Tristan Thielmann
Tag(s) EMCA, World War II, Military, Aircraft
Publisher Media of Cooperation
Year 2019
Language English
City Siegen
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages
URL
DOI
ISBN 978-3-00-063818-3
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This volume makes available for the first time an unpublished report of wartime research, titled „The History of Gulfport Field 1942“, written by Harold Garfinkel, for the US Army Air Forces (AAF) in 1943. The report has both historical and sociological significance. It has value as a historical document that presents in great detail how AAF personnel involved in training aircraft mechanics at one site (Gulfport Field, Mississippi) managed to contend with the rapid construction and deployment of training necessitated by World War II, with its accompanying shortages of material and experienced trainers, and surpluses of persons to be trained. In the face of shortages, AAF commanders adopted a set of practical aims for the school that downplayed the importance of conventional instruction and relied more on „hands on“ practice and „the will to win“. This strategy emphasized a priority of practice over theory that is particularly relevant to the development of Garfinkel’s program of ethnomethodology, his later hybrid studies of work and science, and their relationship to debates in sociology. The book contains a 48-page afterword by Michael Lynch and Anne Rawls.

Notes