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  1. From Garfinkel’s ‘Experiments in Miniature’ to the Ethnomethodological Analysis of Interaction.Dirk vom Lehn - 2019 - Human Studies 42 (2):305-326.
    Since the 1940s Harold Garfinkel developed ethnomethodology as a distinctive sociological attitude. This sociological attitude turns the focus of the analysis of interaction to the actor’s perspective. It suggests that interaction is ongoingly produced through actions that are organized in a retrospective and prospective fashion. The ethnomethodological analysis of interaction therefore investigates how actors produce their actions in light of their analysis of immediately prior actions and in anticipation of possible next actions. Ethnomethodologists describe the relationship of actions emerging from (...)
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  • From'normal appearances'to 'simulation'in interaction.Andrew Travers - 1991 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 21 (3):297–337.
    Since they are modern characters, living in an age of transition more urgently hysterical at any rate than the age which preceded it, I have drawn my people as split and vacillating, a mixture of the old and the new. and I think it not improbable that modern ideas may, through the media of newspapers and conversation, have seeped down into the social stratum which exists below stairs. My souls are agglomerations of past and present cultures, scraps from books and (...)
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  • Ethnomethodology.Daniel J. O'keefe - 1979 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 9 (2):187–219.
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  • The Getting of Sexuality: Foucault, Garfinkel and the Analysis of Sexual Discourse.Alec McHoul - 1986 - Theory, Culture and Society 3 (2):65-79.
  • Ethnomethodology and the position of relativist discourse.A. W. Mchoul - 1981 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 11 (2):107–124.
    The paper works through the topic of ‘theorising’ as it has been treated in ethnomethodology. It is concerned to show that the topic has a somewhat equivocal status within that discourse; that some recent self-critical moves in ethnomethodology which have been touched off by considering these problems constitute no more than further uncritical repetitions of that discourse; that ethnomethodology's critics have been concentrating unnecessarily upon its supposed ‘idealism’ and have missed a central trouble: that ethnomethodology is an overly realist form (...)
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  • De-centered analysis.CharlesC Lemert - 1979 - Theory and Society 7 (3):289-306.
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  • The idea of constitutive order in ethnomethodology.Andrei Korbut - 2014 - European Journal of Social Theory 17 (4):479-496.
    Despite its frequent appearances in sociological textbooks, dictionaries and theoretical opuses, ethnomethodology is still one of the most misunderstood and undervalued domains of sociological inquiry. This is particularly evident in the case of the central sociological question: social order. Harold Garfinkel, the founder of ethnomethodology, provided a unique answer to the question of order. His answer emphasized a contingent, situated character of constitutive practices of local order production. Initially a response to Talcott Parsons’ question about the conditions of the stability (...)
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  • Hard choices: A sociological perspective on value incommensurability. [REVIEW]Eric Cohen & Eyal Ben-Ari - 1993 - Human Studies 16 (3):267 - 297.
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  • Phenomenologophobia.Edward G. Armstrong - 1979 - Human Studies 2 (1):63 - 75.
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