ISBN-13: 9781593853051 / Angielski / Twarda / 2007 / 832 str.
ISBN-13: 9781593853051 / Angielski / Twarda / 2007 / 832 str.
Reviews the foundations of constructionist research, how it is put into practice in multiple disciplines, and where it may be headed in the future. This book examines the analytic frameworks, strategies of inquiry, and methodological choices.
"This handbook presents an encyclopedic treatment of the contours of constructionism as a theoretical stance and an empirical endeavor. Organized around disciplinary domains, empirical topics, and methodological strategies, the book addresses the historical foundations of constructionism as well as current challenges facing constructionist work. Remarkably, the editors have resisted the temptation to sacrifice depth for scope; instead, they cover immense empirical and theoretical territory in a sophisticated yet accessible way. This is a 'must have' resource for students and scholars committed to understanding what social realities are constructed, how they come into being, and the consequences for understanding and ameliorating social problems."--Valerie Jenness, Department of Criminology, Law and Society, and Department of Sociology, University of California, Irvine
"Holstein and Gubrium have edited one of the most exciting and innovative research handbooks of the last decade. This highly pluralistic, intellectually stimulating, and thoroughly comprehensive work presents the many varied facets and perspectives contained within constructionist approaches to research. The more than 50 contributors include an impressive, international cohort of writers from multiple disciplines. Of particular interest to applied psychology are excellent chapters on interviewing, psychological inquiry, therapy, emotion, the body, and the philosophical and historical foundations of constructionist inquiry. This book belongs on the desks of all clinical, counseling, health, and educational psychologists who are interested in current ontological and epistemological discussions around research, knowledge generation, and meaning making. A welcome, nuanced, and decidedly readable text."--Paul M. Camic, Research Director, Clinical Psychology Program, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK
"The time is ripe for this handbook, and Holstein and Gubrium--foundational voices in constructionist discourse--are the persons to do it. The field has matured and come of age, surviving four decades of conflict and controversy. Its future is exciting and promising. This handbook takes the constructionist mosaic into a new century. The field owes Holstein and Gubrium a huge debt for so brilliantly managing this project."--Norman K. Denzin, College of Communications Scholar, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
"It would be difficult to imagine a more complete compendium on the state of constructionism at this time. The editors have taken great care to cover the theoretical underpinnings of constructionism, its anchors in the disciplines, its methodological deployments, and a range of applications, including gender, medicine and therapy, race and ethnicity, emotions, and others. For those committed to the constructionist approach to phenomenological research, there is no better guide to the many practices and theoretical avenues from which to choose, nor could anyone find a better set of discussions of how social constructionist/constructivist philosophies might be utilized with differing methodological strategies and texts."--Yvonna S. Lincoln, College of Education and Human Development, Texas A&M University
"Amid a plethora of handbooks, this one stands out. It tracks the diffusions, foundations, controversies, and remarkable empirical fruitfulness of constructionism in the social sciences. The authors come from multiple disciplines, and the volume is unusually coherent for an edited work. I was particularly struck by what gets 'talked into being' in the name of a constructionism invested in critically taking stock of its analytic and empirical ambitions, intellectual antecedents, new directions, and continuing challenges. From Strauss, Foucault, and Berger and Luckmann to what is on the horizon, from ethnomethodology to cultural studies, across issues of agency and determinism, typologies, traditions, and new imaginaries, I got a taste of the future in this collection, which should stand the test of serving as a resource for quite some time to come."--Patti Lather, author of Getting Lost: Feminist Efforts Toward a Double(d) Science
"Although this book offers an outstanding overview of how constructionist research is conducted across the social sciences and applied fields, it achieves something even more substantial. It challenges both professor and student to question the very foundations of their theoretical claims and scientific practices. The work presented in these pages is provocative, creative, and rich in interpretive and social analysis. This handbook is ideal for seminar discussion and should be on the shelf of every researcher who aspires to apply a constructionist lens to his or her field of study."--Jefferson A. Singer, PhD, Dean of the College and Faulk Foundation Professor of Psychology, Connecticut College
Introduction
1. The Constructionist Mosaic, Jaber F. Gubrium and James A. Holstein
I. Foundations and Historical Context
2. The Philosophical Foundations of Constructionist Research, Darin Weinberg
3. Historical Development and Defining Issues of Constructionist Inquiry, Joel Best
II. Constructionism across the Disciplines
4. Constructionism in Anthropology, James D. Faubion and George E. Marcus
5. Social Constructionist Perspectives in Communication Research, Elissa Foster and Arthur P. Bochner
6. Educational Constructionisms, Stanton Wortham and Kara Jackson
7. Social Constructionism in Management and Organization Studies, Dalvir Samra-Fredericks
8. Critical Constructionism in Nursing Research, Joanna Latimer
9. Social Construction and Psychological Inquiry, Kenneth J. Gergen and Mary M. Gergen
10. Social Constructions in the Study of Public Policy, Anne L. Schneider and Helen Ingram
11. Social Constructionism in Science and Technology Studies, Sal Restivo and Jennifer Croissant
12. Constructionism in Sociology, Scott R. Harris
III. The Scope of Constructionist Inquiry
13. Foucauldian Constructionism, Leslie Miller
14. Discursive Constructionism, Jonathan Potter and Alexa Hepburn
15. Narrative Constructionist Inquiry, Andrew C. Sparkes and Brett Smith
16. Interactional Constructionism, Amir Marvasti
17. Claimsmaking, Culture, and the Media in the Social Construction Process, Kathleen S. Lowney
18. Strict and Contextual Constructionism in the Sociology of Deviance and Social Problems, Peter R. Ibarra
IV. Strategies and Techniques
19. Constructionist Impulses in Ethnographic Fieldwork, James A. Holstein and Jaber F. Gubrium
20. Constructionism and the Grounded Theory Method, Kathy Charmaz
21. Constructionism and Discourse Analysis, Pirjo Nikander
22. A Social Constructionist Framing of the Research Interview, Mirka Koro-Ljungberg
23. Autoethnography as Constructionist Project, Laura L. Ellingson and Carolyn Ellis
24. Documents, Texts, and Archives in Constructionist Research, Annulla Linders
V. The Social Construction of What?
25. The Constructed Body, Bryan S. Turner
26. The Social Construction of Emotion, Donileen R. Loseke and Margarethe Kusenbach
27. Constructing Gender: The Dancer and the Dance, Judith Lorber
28. The Construction of Sex and Sexualities, Sara L. Crawley and K. L. Broad
29. The Diverse Construction of Race and Ethnicity, Mitch Berbrier
30. Constructions of Medical Knowledge, Paul Atkinson and Maggie Gregory
31. Constructing Therapy and Its Outcomes, Gale Miller and Tom Strong
32. Constructionist Themes in the Historiography of the Nation, Bo Stråth
VI. Continuing Challenges
33. The Reality of Social Constructions, Stephen Pfohl
34. Can Constructionism Be Critical?, Dian Marie Hosking
35. Feminism and Constructionism, Barbara L. Marshall
36. Institutional Ethnography and Constructionism, Liza McCoy
37. Ethnomethodology as a Provocation to Constructionism, Michael Lynch
38. Saving Social Construction: Contributions from Cultural Studies, Joseph Schneider
39. Writing Culture, Holism, and the Partialities of Ethnographic Inquiry, Vered Amit
40. Constructionist Research and Globalization, Pertti Alasuutari
James A. Holstein (PhD, University of Michigan) is Professor of Sociology in the Department of Social and Cultural Sciences at Marquette University. His research and publications have addressed social problems, deviance and social control, family, and the self--all approached from an ethnomethodologically informed, constructionist perspective.
Jaber F. Gubrium (PhD, Wayne State University) is Professor and Chair of Sociology at the University of Missouri-Columbia. He has had a long-standing program of research on the social organization of care in human services institutions and pioneered in the reconceptualization of qualitative methods and the development of narrative analysis. Dr. Gubrium has published widely on aging, the life course, medicalization, and representational practice in therapeutic context.
As collaborators for 20 years, Drs. Holstein and Gubrium have developed a distinctive constructionist approach to everyday life in a variety of coauthored and coedited projects.
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