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Ethnomethodology

Four-Volume Set
Michael Lynch Cornell University, New York, USA
Wes Sharrock University of Manchester
© 2011   1656 pages   SAGE Publications Ltd   
Lecturers
Individual Purchasers
Hardcover ISBN: 9781848604414 £600.00
Ethnomethodology is an approach to sociological research founded in the 1960s by Harold Garfinkel and developed by Harvey Sacks and many others. Early initiatives challenged the more abstract types of social theory, and developed distinctive methodological initiatives for a sustained programme of empirical research on social and communicative actions. This four-volume set includes selections that discuss and exemplify how ethnomethodologists use observations, analyses, and interventions to gain insight into larger questions of social order and the organization of practical.

Section One: Background on Social Scientific and Everyday Methods

Section Two: Ethnomethodology and the Practical Resolution of Methodological Problems

Section Three: Indexical Expressions - Topic, Resource or Nuisance?

Section Four: Objectification in Discourse

Section Five: Language, Categories and Membership

Section Six: Studies of Work

Section Seven: Action as Algorithm - Computer Supported Cooperative Work

Section Eight: Ethnomethodology and Social Institutions

Section Nine: Language, Interaction, Embodied Conduct

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