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9 Νοε 2020 · Ethnomethodology is a form of social inquiry that studies the largely implicit methods that members of social groups use to create and maintain the orderliness of social action.
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Ethnomethodology is a form of social inquiry that studies...
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2 Αυγ 2006 · Arising as a powerful challenge to programmatic views of sociology that sought to determine stable laws underpinning social order, ethnomethodology set out an alternative programme to reveal...
• Ethnomethodology a dissident sociology • Retains a connection to sociological themes but thinks of itself as: • An alternate, asymmetrical and incommensurable sociology
Ethnomethodology means the study of members’ methods for producing recognizable social orders. It starts from the fact that sociologists are, first and foremost, members of society like anyone else, equipped with the same kinds of social competencies that any member of society can be presumed to possess.
In the mid-1960s, Harold Garfinkel coined the term ethnomethodology (EM) for the sociological approach that he was about to invent, an approach devoted to the study of the mundane methods of practical action and practical reasoning in everyday situations (Garfinkel, 1967).
First, it presents the empirical outlook, basic assumptions, and key principles of ethnomethodological inquiry. Second, it charts three major strands of ethnomethodological analysis (EA): conceptual analysis, conversation analysis, and practical analysis (i.e., “studies of work”).
BACKGROUND. Harold Garfinkel (1917–2011) studied for a PhD degree with Talcott Parsons at Har-vard University while regularly meeting with Alfred Schütz in New York to discuss phenomenology and its import for sociol-ogy.