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  1. Methods of Discovery: Heuristics for the Social Sciences.Andrew Delano Abbott - 2004 - W W Norton & Company.
    Abbott helps social science students discover what questions to ask. This exciting book is not about habits and the mechanics of doing social science research, but about habits of thinking that enable students to use those mechanics in new ways, by coming up with new ideas and combining them more effectively with old ones. Abbott organizes his book around general methodological moves, and uses examples from throughout the social sciences to show how these moves can open new lines of thinking. (...)
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  • I.1 The Work of a Discovering Science Construed with Materials from the Optically Discovered Pulsar.Harold Garfinkel - 1981 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 11 (2):131-158.
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  • Cognition and Communication at Work.Yrjo Engeström & David Middleton (eds.) - 1996 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book brings together contributions from researchers within various social science disciplines who seek to redefine the methods and topics that constitute the study of work. They investigate work activity in ways that do not reduce it to a "psychology" of individual cognition or to a "sociology" of societal structures and communication. A key theme in the material is the relationship between theory and practice. Mindful practices and communicative interaction are examined as situated issues at work in the reproduction of (...)
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  • Opening up Closings.Emanuel A. Schegloff & Harvey Sacks - 1973 - Semiotica 8 (4).
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  • Evidence for locally produced, naturally accountable phenomena of order, logic, reason, meaning, method, etc. In and as of the essential quiddity of immortal ordinary society, (I of IV): An announcement of studies.Harold Garfinkel - 1988 - Sociological Theory 6 (1):103-109.
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  • Scientific Practice and Ordinary Action: Ethnomethodology and Social Studies of Science.Michael Lynch - 1993 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Philosophers, historians, and sociologists of science have grown interested in the daily practices of scientists. Recent studies have drawn linkages between scientific innovations and more ordinary procedures, craft skills, and sources of sponsorship. These studies dispute the idea that science is the application of a unified method or the outgrowth of a progressive history of ideas. This book critically reviews arguments and empirical studies in two areas of sociology that have played a significant role in the 'sociological turn' in science (...)
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  • Sequential order and sequence structure: the case of incommensurable studies on mobile phone calls.Ilkka Arminen - 2005 - Discourse Studies 7 (6):649-662.
    Two recent conversation analytical studies draw contrary conclusions from seemingly very similar materials. Hutchby and Barnett ‘show that, far from revolutionizing the organization of telephone conversation, mobile phone talk retains many of the norms associated with landline phone talk’. Arminen and Leinonen, however, state that landline and mobile calls differ systematically from each other. These incommensurate findings raise the question of why the comparisons between landline and mobile call openings have not been able to determine whether social and communicative practices (...)
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  • Order and Agency in Modernity: Talcott Parsons, Erving Goffman, and Harold Garfinkel.Kwang-ki Kim - 2003 - SUNY Press.
    Addresses the relationship between modernity and social theory by looking at the works of Parsons, Goffman, and Garfinkel.
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  • Skepticist philosophy as ethnomethodology.Alex Dennis - 2003 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 33 (2):151-173.
    Ethnomethodology is in trouble, its conceptual apparatus prone to indifference or misunderstanding both from "conventional" sociologists and from its own practitioners. This article describes some of these loci of confusion and suggests that they have a common root in the relationship between ethnomethodology and conventional sociology. Ethnomethodologists' desire to find a principled theoretical framework for dealing with this relationship is shown to be the common basis for subsequent confusion, and some of the corollaries of their putative solution(s) are elaborated with (...)
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  • Lectures on Conversation.Harvey Sacks & Gail Jefferson - 1995 - Human Studies 18 (2):327-336.
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  • Understanding ethnomethodology: A remedy for some common misconceptions. [REVIEW]Mark Peyrot - 1982 - Human Studies 5 (1):261 - 283.
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  • Silence in context: Ethnomethodology and social theory. [REVIEW]Michael Lynch - 1999 - Human Studies 22 (2-4):211-233.
    Ethnomethodologists (or at least many of them) have been reticent about their theoretical sources and methodological principles. It frequently falls to others to make such matters explicit. In this paper I discuss this silence about theory, but rather than entering the breach by specifying a set of implicit assumptions and principles, I suggest that the reticence is consistent with ethnomethodology's distinctive research 'program'. The main part of the paper describes the pedagogical exercises and forms of apprenticeship through which Garfinkel and (...)
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  • Language as Calculus vs. Language as Universal Medium: A Study in Husserl, Heidegger and Gadamer.Maren Kusch - 1989 - Springer Verlag.
    I first became interested in Husserl and Heidegger as long ago as 1980, when as an undergraduate at the Freie Universitat Berlin I studied the books by Professor Ernst Tugendhat. Tugendhat's at tempt to bring together analytical and continental philosophy has never ceased to fascinate me, and even though in more recent years other influences have perhaps been stronger, I should like to look upon the present study as still being indebted to Tugendhat's initial incentive. It was my good fortune (...)
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  • Ethnomethodology as radical sociology: An expansive appreciation of Melvin Pollner's 'constitutive and mundane versions of labeling theory'. [REVIEW]T. J. Berard - 2003 - Human Studies 26 (4):431-448.
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