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Ethnomethodology

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Title: Ethnomethodology


1
Ethnomethodology
  • By
  • Cole HippenDanielle Yates
  • Kit Mason

2
Harold Garfinkel
  • Harold Garfinkel was born in Newark, New Jersey,
    on October 29, 1917. His father was a businessman
    and hoped that Harold would learn the trade, but
    Harold wanted to attend college.
  • He attended the University of Newark beginning in
    1935 and became a student of economics. He
    graduated in 1939.
  • He spent the summer in a Quaker work camp in
    rural Georgia where he was later accepted into
    the program with a fellowship and chose Guy
    Johnson as his thesis adviser. He then received a
    M.A. From the University of North Carolina in
    1942.

http//ecsocman.edu.ru/images/pubs/2003/12/08/0000
138583/image.Garfinkelx202001.jpg
3
Harold Garfinkel cont
  • After serving in WWII he attended Harvard
    University to study with Talcott Parsons. While a
    doctoral studen he taught for two years at
    Princeton, and after obtaining his Ph.D. He
    taught for two years at Ohio State University
  • He joined a project researching juries in
    Wichita, Kansas , and in preparing a talk for the
    1954 American Sociologiacal Association meetings
    he came up with the term ethnomethodology to
    describe what fascinated him about the jury
    deliberations and social life more generally.
  • He accepted a position as assistant professor at
    UCLA, where he continued to conduct research in
    the field of ethnomethodology.
  • His career at UCLA is a distinguished one as he
    is now a professor emeritus and in 1995 he
    received the Cooley-Mead award for lifetime
    contributions to the intellectual and scientific
    advancement of sociology and social psychology.

4
Influences
  • Ethnomethodology is influenced by phenomenology,
    linguistics, anthropology, symbolic
    interactionism, and other mainstream concepts
    found in sociology. In Studies in
    Ethnomethodology (1967) he wrote that his work
    had been particularly influenced by Talcott
    Parsons, Alfred Schutz, Aron Gurwitsch, and
    Edmund Husserl.
  • As Ritzer (2000c) stated, While Parsons stressed
    the importance of abstract categories and
    generalizations, Garfinkel was interested in
    detailed description.

5
Structure of Social Action
  • The Structure of Social Action is that all the
    carious social sciences essentially deal with
    systems of social action. 1. An Actor The agent
    of the act. 2.An end A future state of affairs
    which the actor seeks to bring about by the act.
    3. Action A current situation within which the
    actor acts and which he or she seeks to transform
    by his or her behavior. 4. Means A mode of
    orientation.

6
More Influences
  • Shutz concluded that each indicidual carries with
    him or hear a stock of knowledge at hand
    consisting of constructs and categories that are
    common sense and of social origin when
    interacting with others in the social world.
  • Branching out from ethnomethodology, Garfinkel
    became famous for his breaching experiments.
    Garfinkel argued , one must breach constitutive
    expectancies in radical ways, since the natural
    attitude guarantees that people assimilate
    strange into familiar, without dismantling
    the presuppositions underlying a shared world.

7
Ethnomethodology
  • Ethnomethodology is an approach to understanding
    social interaction and is based on the
    assumption that social reality is the reasult of
    our agreement to agree with one another.
  • Ethnomethodology, given its greek roots literally
    means the methods of ordianry people that are
    used on a daily basis to accomplish their
    everyday needs.
  • Wallace and wolf stated, If we translate the
    ethno part of the term as member or folk or
    people then ethnomethodology can be defined as
    members' methods of making sense of their social
    world. Ethnomethodology interest is in how people
    make sense of everyday activities.

8
Ethnomethodology Cont
  • Garfinkel believed that life consists of many
    ordered things and activities. Ethnomethodology's
    fundamental phenomenon and its standing
    technical preoccupation in its studies is to
    find, collect, specify, and make instrutably
    observable the local endogenous production and
    natural accountability of immortal familiar
    society's most ordinary organizational things in
    the world, and to provide for them both and
    simultaneously as objects and procedurally as
    alternate methodologies. The identity of objects
    and methodologies is key.
  • In other words ethnomethodology is concerned with
    the organization of everyday, ordinary life
  • Ethnomethodology attempts to reveal the
    subjective nature of human interaction. It has a
    microfocus on daily life and on the thoughts and
    actions of human behavior.

9
Accounting
  • Accounting is the process by which people offer
    accounts in order to make sense of the world.
    Ethnomethodologist devote a lot of attention to
    analyzing peoples accounts, as well as to the
    ways in which accounts are offered and accepted
    (or rejected) by others.
  • Garfinkel (1967) stated that sociologists
    distinguish the product from the process
    meanings of a common understanding. As product,
    a common understanding is thought to consist of a
    shared agreement on a substantive matters as
    process it consists of various methods whereby
    something that a person says or does is
    recognized to accord with a rule.

10
Applying Ethnomethodology
  • Ethnomethodology is concerned with an
    interruption of daily life in order to reveal
    standard rules
  • In order to reveal rules that are a natural part
    of society, Garfinkel believes that we must
    disrupt the natural process of reality
    construction in order to reveal deep set rules.

11
Breaching Experiments
  • Breaching Experiments
  • The breaching experiment is a type of empirical
    inquiry in which normal interaction is
    interrupted
  • Social reality is violated in order to reveal the
    methods of reality construction
  • This research is based on these foundations
  • Production of social life occurs all the time
  • Participants are unaware that they are engaging
    in such actions
  • Breaching must be radical because people will
    naturally assimilate strange situations into
    familiar ones, and in order to cause disruption,
    one must create a radical enough breach that it
    cannot be normally constructed
  • Individuals attempt to normalize imbalances in
    the breaching experiment. Seeking balance is a
    normal constant and is an attempt at putting
    meaning to the world
  • Breaching experiments can be done in fairly
    casual settings
  • One example is the tic-tac-toe experiment, in
    which the researcher places their mark between
    lines, confusing the subject, who attempts to
    rationalize the actions of the researcher
  • Breaching experiments will often cause the
    subjects to become confused, angry, and upset

12
Conversation Analysis
  • Garfinkel's definition of communication is a
    means of clarifying or repairing social problems
    created by human communication.
  • Garfinkel believes that a greater aspect of
    communication is what goes unsaid, rather than
    what is said
  • Anticipatory knowledge from previous interactions
    guide the conversation
  • Without this knowledge, conversations would spend
    all their time explaining history of interactions
  • Language is a tool for interpreting and
    clarifying social interactions

13
Phenomena of Order
  • Order over chaos
  • Rational thinking reinforces need for social
    order
  • Social order is an ongoing process subject to
    constant change and even misinterpretation

14
The Degradation Ceremony
  • Identify is influenced by
  • Internal reflection
  • External projection
  • Degradation ceremonies are public attempts to
    inflict identity alteration
  • They are purposeful attempts at embarrassment
    rather than accidental
  • Status forcing is a planned event in which the
    subject will know that they are in for a loss of
    self credibility
  • Unplanned embarrassment is different than the
    degradation ceremony because it is accidental and
    unplanned, while still resulting in a loss of
    face
  • Examples would be Don Imus racial slurs, Bill
    Clinton's sexual affair etc
  • The degradation ceremony is calculated and would
    more include the public backlash at the
    embarrassment in which the subject can foresee
    this and anticipate their own loss of face

15
8 Conditions for Degradation
  • Both event and perpetrator must be removed from
    the realm of character and be made to look out of
    the ordinary
  • Both event and perpetrator must be placed in a
    scheme that shows no preferences were given
  • The denouncer must identify themselves to all
    witnesses that during denunciation the
    perpetrator is a publicly known person, and not
    privately known by the denouncer, clearing
    possible bias
  • The denouncer must make the dignity of the values
    of the group salient and viewable. The
    denunciation must be done in the name of the
    people
  • The denouncer must arrange to be invested with
    the right to speak in the name of the values of
    the group-the denouncer represents society
  • The denouncer must be recognized as this societal
    representor
  • The denouncer must maintain proper social
    distance from the accused perpetrator and
    witnesses
  • The denounced person must be ritually separated
    from a place in the legitimate order. They must
    be classified as an outsider

16
Studies by other Ethnomothodologists
  • Talking the convict code in an inmate halfway
    house (1974)
  • Designing a Xerox copier to ensure complaint-free
    operation by office personnel(1985)
  • Learning to play jazz piano(1978)

17
Aaron V. Cicourel
  • Belief that quantitative research methods does
    not guarantee more objective research study
  • Renamed his brand of ethnomethodology as
    Cognitive Sociology
  • Goal uncover the universal interpretive
    procedures that humans use to give meaning to
    social situations

18
Dierdre Boden
  • Attempted to integrate ethnomethodology with
    symbolic interactionism
  • She focuses on conversation and focuses on the
    verbal talking aspect of conversations
  • Coined the term interactional analysis
  • She attempts to highlight the importance of the
    thought process involved in conversation
  • People dont only react to talk, but interpret it.

19
Harvey Sacks
  • He also studies talk
  • He wants to discover universal forms of
    interactions that apply to all conversations

20
Other Ethnomethodologists
  • Conventional sociologists use the everyday social
    world as a topic.
  • Zimmerman, Pollner, Wieder reject the
    conventional view and treat the world as a
    resource
  • They are concerned with how members of society
  • See
  • Describe
  • Explainin
  • Social behavior

21
Relevancy
  • Theoretical perspective that seeks to understand
    human behavior by examining the methods that
    people employ to make sense of the world
  • Study of the everyday practices of people
  • Not considered mainstream sociology
  • Has not produced laws of general behavior
  • Greatest contribution is conversation analysis
  • Degradation ceremony research relevant
  • Ignores macrostructural factors in
    micro-interactions
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