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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Journal | Volume | Article

145429

Is there any good reason to say goodbye to "ethnomethodology"?

Louis Quéré

pp. 305-325

Abstract

This paper is an essay about Harold Garfinkel's heritage. It outlines a response to Eric Livingston's proposal to say goodbye to ethnomethodology as pertaining to the sociological tradition; and it rejects part of Melvin Pollner's diagnosis about the changes occurred in ethnomethodological working. If it agrees with Pollner about the idea that something of the initial ethnomethodology's program has been left aside after the "work studies" turn, it asserts that such a turn has nonetheless made possible authentic discoveries. So the paper speaks for a better integration of the two versions of ethnomethodology separated by Pollner.

Publication details

Published in:

Psathas George, Endreß Martin (2012) In memoriam of Harold Garfinkel. Human Studies 35 (2).

Pages: 305-325

DOI: 10.1007/s10746-012-9234-0

Full citation:

Quéré Louis (2012) „Is there any good reason to say goodbye to "ethnomethodology"?“. Human Studies 35 (2), 305–325.