Beskrivning
Should cultural meaning be understood in terms of psychological motivations and intentions, or in terms of collective codes and belief systems? Max Weber saw the task of the interpretive sociologist as that of reconstructing the objective and subjective rationality of ideal typical actors. Neo-Kantians, phenomenologists, critical interpretivists, pragmatists, symbolic interactionists, ethnomethodologists, cultural anthropologists and others have struggled for over a century over what such an approach entails. The development of an interpretive or verstehen approach to understanding social life draws itself in distinction from approaches that seek causal explanation in terms of variables external to the beliefs of social actors, but this collection attempts to disrupt the comfortable polarities between macro and micro, structure and agency, explanation and description that dog sociology and through which the term interpretive has been quarantined.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum:2010-09-13
- Mått:156 x 234 x 117 mm
- Vikt:3 040 g
- Format:Inbunden
- Språk:Engelska
- Serie:SAGE Benchmarks in Social Research Methods
- Antal sidor:1 672
- Upplaga:1
- Förlag:SAGE Publications
- ISBN:9781847879479
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Matthew David is a Senior Lecturer in Applied Social Science at Durham University, and has undertaken research in the areas of new social movements, online data-services in higher education, online training in rural areas and forms of free online music sharing. He is author of Science in Society (Palgrave 2005) and Peer to Peer and the Music Industry (SAGE 2010), and co-author of Social Research (SAGE, latest edition 2011).
Innehållsförteckning
- VOLUME 1SECTION ONE: THE CLASSICAL STATEMENTS AND AUTHORSThe Rise of Hermeneutics - Wilhelm Dilthey and Frederic JamesonTranslator′s Introduction to Max Weber′s Essay on Some Categories of Interpretive Sociology - Edith GraberSome Categories of Interpretive Sociology - Max Weber"Anticritical Last Word on The Spirit of Capitalism," by Max Weber - Wallace Davis "Capitalism" in Recent German Literature: Sombart and Weber - Talcott Parsons "Capitalism" in Recent German Literature: Sombart and Weber (concluded) - Talcott ParsonsThe Role of Ideas in Social Action - Talcott ParsonsThe Problem of Sociology - Georg SimmelThe Sociology of Sociability - Georg Simmel and Everett C. HughesThe Verstehen Thesis and the Foundations of Max Weber′s Methodology, History and Theory - Guy Oakes Rickert′s Value Theory and the Foundations of Max Weber′s Methodology - Guy Oakes SECTION TWO: THE INTERPRETERS AND CHALLENGERS OF THE CLASSIC INTERPRETIVIST IDEA OF VERSTEHENThe Operation Called Vershehen - Theodore AbelOn the Method of Verstehen as the Sole Method of Philosophy - Ernest NagelEmpirical Science and Max Weber′s Verstehende Soziologie - Peter Munch Max Weber′s" Verstehen" - William T. TuckerVerstehen I and Verstehen II, Theory and Decision - Theodore Abel "Sense" and "Intention" in Max Weber′s Theory of Social Action - Peter Munch Weber on Action - Stephen P. TurnerMax Weber′s ′Interpretive Sociology′: A comparison of conception and practice - Mary Fulbrook Value-Relevance, Scientific Laws, and Ideal Types: The sociological methodology of Max Weber - John Rex Max Weber on Causal Analysis, Interpretation, and Comparison - Fritz Ringer Max Weber′s Interpretive Sociology, the Understanding of Actions and Motives, and a Weberian View of Man - Thomas BurgerMax Weber, Interpretive Sociology, and the Sense of Historical Science: A Positivistic Conception of Verstehen - Thomas Burder Causality or Interaction? Simmel, Weber and Interpretive Sociology - K Lichtblau Weber′s Interpretive Sociology and Rational Choice Approach - Zenonas NorkusWeber′s Verstehen and the History of Qualitative Research: The missing link - Jennifer Platt Weber and Interpretive Sociology in America - Peter Kivisto and William H. Swatos JrVOLUME 2SECTION THREE: THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL CRITICSThe Stranger: An Essay in Social Psychology - Alfred SchutzCommon-sense and Scientific Interpretation of Human Action - Alfred Schutz SchutzChoosing Among Projects of Action - Alfred SchutzConcept and Theory Formation in the Social Sciences - Alfred SchutzOn Phenomenological Sociology - James L. Heap and Phillip A. RothCan There Be a Phenomenological Sociology? - Edo PivcevicAlfred Schutz and the Austrian School of Economics - Christopher PrendergastThe Rationality of Everyday Behaviour: A rational choice reconstruction of the theory of action by Alfred Schutz - Hartmut EsserRationality, Optimality and Choice: Esser′s reconstruction of Alfred Schutz′s theory of action - Christopher PrendergastSpontaneous Social Order: Econmics and Sch tzian sociology - Nicolai Juul FossAlfred Schutz on a Theory of Motivation - Andrew J. WeigertFrom Weber to Parsons and Schutz: The eclipse of history in modern social theory - David ZaretExistential Phenomenology and the Sociological Tradition - Edward TiryakianJiri Kolaja and Peter Berger Respond to Edward Tiryakian and he Responds Back - Jiri Kolaja and Peter BergerSECTION FOUR: THE CRITICAL PHENOMENOLOGISTSThe Relation between Psychology and Sociology in the Work of Wilhelm Dilthey - Max HorkheimerExistentialism: Remarks on Jean-Paul Sartre′s L′Etre et le Neant - Herbert MarcuseTowards a Reconstruction of Historical Materialism - Jurgen HabermasSome Distinctions in Universal Pragmatics - Jurgen HabermasThe A Priori of Communication and the Foundation of the Humanities - Karlo Otto ApelDilthey′s Distinction Between "Explanation" and "Understanding" and the Possibility of Its "Mediation" - Karl Otto ApelThe Hermeneutic Dimension of Social Science and its Normative Foundation - Karl Otto ApelNew Developments in Phenomenology in France: The phenomenology of language - Paul RicoeurTowards Actionist Sociology, Social Science Information - Alain TouraineThe Voice and the Eye: On the relationship between actors and analysts - Alain TouraineRationality in the Slum: An essay on interpretive sociology - Alejandro PortesMeeting or Mis-Meeting? The Dialogical Challenge to Verstehen - Rob ShieldsVOLUME 3SECTION FIVE: SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONISMThe Mechanism of Social Consciousness - George Herbert MeadThe Social Self - George Herbert MeadSocial Consciousness - Charles Horton CooleyThe Roots of Social Knowledge - Charles Horton CooleyScience without Concepts - Herbert BlumerAttitudes and the Social Act - Herbert BlumerSociological Analysis and the "Variable" - Herbert BlumerSociological Implications of the Thought of George Herbert Mead - Herbert BlumerBecoming a Marihuana User - Howard BeckerWhose Side Are We On - Howard BeckerSymbols of Class Status - Erving GoffmanThe Moral Career of the Mental Patient, Psychiatry: Journal for the Study of Interpersonal Processes - Erving GoffmanMajor Trends in Symbolic Interaction Theory in the Last Twenty Five Years - Manfred KuhnSECTION SIX: ETHNOMETHODOLOGYConditions of Successful Degradation Ceremonies - Harold GarfinkelStudies of the Routine Grounds of Everyday Activities - Harold GarfinkelEvidence for Locally Produced, Naturally Accountable Phenomena of Order, Logic, Reason, Meaning, Method, etc - Harold GarfinkelEthnomethodology′s Program - Harold GarfinkelA Note on the Uses of Official Statistics - Aaron Cicourel and John KitsuseThe Role of Cognitive-Linguistic Concepts in Understanding Everyday Social Interactions - Aaron CicourelText and Discourse - Aaron CicourelThe Interpenetration of Communicative Contexts: Examples from medical encounters - Aaron CicourelJohn Rawls on Two Concepts of Rules - Aaron CicourelSymbolic Interactionism and Ethnomethodology: A proposed synthesis - Norman DenzinVerstehen, Language and Warrants - James L. HeapWriting as Social Action, Theory into Practice - James L. HeapPractical Reason in Depression: a Practice - James L. HeapVOLUME 4SECTION SEVEN: CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGISTS"From the Native′s Point of View": On the nature of anthropological understanding - Clifford GeertzDeep Play: Notes on the Balinese cockfight - Clifford GeertzCommon Sense as a Cultural System - Clifford GeertzThe Way We Think Now: Toward an ethnography of modern thought - Clifford GeertzUnderstanding a Primitive Society - Peter WinchSocial Science - Peter WinchRhetoric and the Ethnographic Genre in Anthropological Research - George MarcusEthnographies as Texts - George Marcus and Dick CushmanOn Ethnographic Authority - James CliffordCultural Systems, and History: From Synchrony to Transformation - William H. SewellSECTION EIGHT: CONTEMPORARY INTERPRETATIONS, EXTENSIONS, FUSIONS AND APPLICATIONSOn Interpreting and Interpretation - N. DenzinSociological Knowledge: Winch, Marxism, and Verstehen Revisited - Kai NielsenInterpretivism and Generalisation - Malcolm Williams