Methods of Interpretive Sociology
Four Volume Set
Edited by:
- Matthew David - Durham University, UK
September 2010 | 1 672 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
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.
VOLUME 1
SECTION ONE: THE CLASSICAL STATEMENTS AND AUTHORS
Wilhelm Dilthey and Frederic Jameson
Edith Graber
Max Weber
Wallace Davis
Talcott Parsons
Talcott Parsons
Talcott Parsons
Georg Simmel
Georg Simmel and Everett C. Hughes
Guy Oakes
Guy Oakes
SECTION TWO: THE INTERPRETERS AND CHALLENGERS OF THE CLASSIC INTERPRETIVIST IDEA OF VERSTEHEN
Theodore Abel
Ernest Nagel
Peter Munch
William T. Tucker
Theodore Abel
Peter Munch
Stephen P. Turner
Mary Fulbrook
John Rex
Fritz Ringer
Thomas Burger
Thomas Burder
K Lichtblau
Zenonas Norkus
Jennifer Platt
Peter Kivisto and William H. Swatos Jr
VOLUME 2
SECTION THREE: THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL CRITICS
Alfred Schutz
Alfred Schutz Schutz
Alfred Schutz
Alfred Schutz
James L. Heap and Phillip A. Roth
Edo Pivcevic
Christopher Prendergast
Hartmut Esser
Christopher Prendergast
Nicolai Juul Foss
Andrew J. Weigert
David Zaret
Edward Tiryakian
Jiri Kolaja and Peter Berger
SECTION FOUR: THE CRITICAL PHENOMENOLOGISTS
Max Horkheimer
Herbert Marcuse
Jurgen Habermas
Jurgen Habermas
Karlo Otto Apel
Karl Otto Apel
Karl Otto Apel
Paul Ricoeur
Alain Touraine
Alain Touraine
Alejandro Portes
Rob Shields
VOLUME 3
SECTION FIVE: SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONISM
George Herbert Mead
George Herbert Mead
Charles Horton Cooley
Charles Horton Cooley
Herbert Blumer
Herbert Blumer
Herbert Blumer
Herbert Blumer
Howard Becker
Howard Becker
Erving Goffman
Erving Goffman
Manfred Kuhn
SECTION SIX: ETHNOMETHODOLOGY
Harold Garfinkel
Harold Garfinkel
Harold Garfinkel
Harold Garfinkel
Aaron Cicourel and John Kitsuse
Aaron Cicourel
Aaron Cicourel
Aaron Cicourel
Aaron Cicourel
Norman Denzin
James L. Heap
James L. Heap
James L. Heap
VOLUME 4
SECTION SEVEN: CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGISTS
Clifford Geertz
Clifford Geertz
Clifford Geertz
Clifford Geertz
Peter Winch
Peter Winch
George Marcus
George Marcus and Dick Cushman
James Clifford
William H. Sewell
SECTION EIGHT: CONTEMPORARY INTERPRETATIONS, EXTENSIONS, FUSIONS AND APPLICATIONS
N. Denzin
Kai Nielsen
Malcolm Williams