1st Edition

Everyday Life Reconstruction of Social Knowledge

By Jack D Douglas Copyright 1970
    370 Pages
    by Routledge

    370 Pages
    by Routledge

    Interest in the ethnomethodology and other phenomenological sociologies grew very rapidly among students and professionals in social science during the latter part of the twentieth century. The growth of this interest was handicapped by the lack of clear, systematic, and comprehensive treatments of their basic ideas and research findings. This book provides the first genuinely intelligible and reasonably systematic presentation of this perspective and contributed to the restructuring of empirical knowledge upon solid foundations. It remains important to those who would understood these areas of the social sciences and their potential to contribute to understanding of social life. These original essays, all of which share ideas about the scientific inadequacies of conventional sociologies and the fundamental importance of these new approaches, were contributed by many of the best young research workers and theorists of this approach in 1970, when the book was originally published. They are critical, theoretical, and empirical, and provide the first understandable presentation of this new mode of thought, its distinctions from old points of view, the range of problems that concern its practitioners, and the kinds of results that can be achieved. The book's clarity and systematic treatment of important research topics make it suitable for courses in sociological theory and research, the history of social thought, and related subjects. In addition, this volume can be used in courses specifically dealing with ethnomethodology, in graduate seminars dealing with these issues, and in academic work based on this orientation.

    Preface 

    PART ONE: ABSOLUTIST SOCIOLOGIES AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL SOCIOLOGIES
    1. Understanding Everyday Life 
    Jack D. Douglas 
    2. Alfred Schutz and the Sociology of Common-sense Knowledge 
    John Heeren
    3. Normative and Interpretive Paradigms in Sociology 
    Thomas P. Wilson
    4. The Everyday World as a Phenomenon 
    Don H. Zimmerman and Melvin Pollner

    PART TWO: CONSTRUCTING SITUATIONAL MEANINGS: LANGUAGE, MEANING AND ACTION
    5. On Meaning by Rule 
    D. Lawrence Wieder 
    6. The Acquisition of Social Structure: Toward a Developmental Sociology of Language and Meaning 
    Aaron V. Cicourel 
    7. Words, Utterances, and Activities 
    Roy Turner 
    8. The Everyday World of the Child 
    Matthew Speier 

    PART THREE: RULES, SITUATED MEANINGS, AND ORGANIZED ACTIVITIES
    9. The Practicalities of Rule Use 
    Don H. Zimmerman 
    10. Talking and Becoming: A View of Organizational Socialization 
    Peter K. Manning

    PART FOUR: SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONISM AND ETHNOMETHODOLOGY
    11. Symbolic Interactionism and Ethnomethodology
    Norman K. Denzin
    12. Ethnomethodology and the Problem of Order: Comment on Denzin 
    Don H. Zimmerman and D. Lawrence Wieder

    PART FIVE: SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY AND TRUTH 
    13. Theorizing Alan F. Blum 
    14. On the Failure of Positivism Peter McHugh 
    References 
    Index 

    Biography

    Jack D Douglas