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Documentary & Archival Research [Multiple-component retail product]

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  • Formaat: Multiple-component retail product, 1544 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 2810 g, 4 Items, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sari: Sage Benchmarks in Social Research Methods
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Mar-2014
  • Kirjastus: Sage Publications Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1446210944
  • ISBN-13: 9781446210949
  • Formaat: Multiple-component retail product, 1544 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 2810 g, 4 Items, Contains 4 hardbacks
  • Sari: Sage Benchmarks in Social Research Methods
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Mar-2014
  • Kirjastus: Sage Publications Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1446210944
  • ISBN-13: 9781446210949
This collection successfully discusses the different ways documentation comes into being and how and why they become objects of social research. It emphasizes the interdisciplinary scale of the field as well as both its qualitative and its quantitative scope. This research tradition has arisen from a specific set of historical, disciplinary and institutional conditions. The very emergence of documentation is predicated upon a set of long-term processes in which humans have developed the capacity to use symbols and store knowledge such that it can be exchanged and inter-generationally transmitted.Consisting of an impressive list of contributors, the four volumes discuss the history, development and current debates alive in the field, such as the biographical turn in social science, the theoretical underpinnings to using human documents in social research and the epistemological, substantive and practical concerns with the process of analyzing data from human documentary sources.Comprehensive, illuminating and dynamic, this collection will have appeal across all social science disciplines, especially sociology, social psychology, criminology, politics and international relations, management and business studies, human geography, media and communication studiesVolume One: Human Documents: Perspectives and ApproachesVolume Two: Analyzing Human DocumentsVolume Three: Human Documents in Social ResearchVolume Four: Archival Research and Data Re-Use
Appendix of Sources xiii
Acknowledgement xxiii
Editors' Introduction: Human Documents and Archival Research xxv
Jason Hughes
John Goodwin
Volume I Human Documents -- Perspectives and Approaches
1 Basic Themes: Use, Production and Content
1(32)
Lindsay Prior
2 An Appraisal of Thomas and Znaniecki's: The Polish Peasant in Europe and America
33(8)
Herbert Blumer
3 Comment on Blumer's Analysis
41(8)
Florian Znaniecki
4 Nomothetic and Idiographic Uses
49(10)
G. Allport
5 The Use of Personal Documents in Historical Sociology
59(14)
Hyman Mariampolski
Dana C. Hughes
6 To the Letter: Thomas and Znaniecki's The Polish Peasant and Writing a Life, Sociologically
73(14)
Liz Stanley
7 For a Humanistic Way in Social Science
87(18)
Ken Plummer
8 Evidence and Proof in Documentary Research: Part I, Some Specific Problems of Documentary Research
105(18)
Jennifer Piatt
9 Evidence and Proof in Documentary Research: Part II, Some Shared Problems of Documentary Research
123(12)
Jennifer Piatt
10 A Biographical Turn in the Social Sciences? A British-European View
135(24)
Tom Wengraf Prue Chamberlayne
Joanna Bornat
11 Foucault and Critique: Kant, Humanism and the Human Sciences
159(28)
Mark Olssen
12 Critical Humanism in a Post-Modern World
187(12)
Ken Plummer
13 Assumptions of the Method
199(14)
Norman K. Denzin
14 Autobiography and Biography
213(24)
Brian Roberts
15 Auto/Biography and Sociology
237(22)
Brian Roberts
16 The Social Science of Biographical Life-Writing: Some Methodological and Ethical Issues
259(18)
Ann Oakley
17 On Auto/Biography in Sociology
277(12)
Liz Stanley
18 Repositioning Documents in Social Research
289(16)
Lindsay Prior
19 Historians and Oral History
305(44)
Paul Thompson
20 Constructing Credible Images: Documentary Studies, Social Research, and Visual Studies
349
Jon Wagner
Volume II Analysing Human Documents
21 Assessing Documentary Sources
1(18)
John Scott
22 Analysing Documentary Realities
19(16)
Paul Atkinson
Amanda Coffey
23 Doing Historical and Documentary Research
35(22)
Ben Gidley
24 Content, Meaning and Reference
57(20)
Lindsay Prior
25 The Interpretation of Documents and Material Culture
77(18)
Ian Hodder
26 Using Visual Methods and Documents
95(22)
Jennifer Mason
27 The Interpretation of Pictures and the Documentary Method
117(24)
Ralf Bohnsack
28 Comments on Elias's `Scenes from the Life of a Knight"
141(6)
Eric Dunning
29 How to Look at Family Photographs: Practices, Objects, Subjects and Places
147(24)
Gillian Rose
30 Videography: Analysing Video Data as a `Focused' Ethnographic and Hermeneutical Exercise
171(24)
Hubert Knoblauch
Bernt Schnettler
31 What Is Discourse Analysis?
195(16)
Brian Paltridge
32 Extracts from Doing Discourse Analysis: Methods for Studying Action in Talk and Text
211(52)
Linda A. Wood
Rolf O. Kroger
33 Exploring Conversations about and with Documents
263(12)
Tim Rapley
34 The Epistolarium: On Theorizing Letters and Correspondences
275(30)
Liz Stanley
35 Analyzing Biographies and Narratives
305(16)
G. Gibbs
36 Pearls, Pith, and Provocation: Ethical Issues in the Documentary Data Analysis of Internet Posts and Archives
321(12)
Judith Sixsmith
Craig D. Murray
37 Sociology and, of and in Web 2.0: Some Initial Considerations
333(20)
David Beer
Roger Burrows
38 Towards a Sociological Understanding of Social Media: Theorizing Twitter
353
Dhiraj Murthy
Volume III Human Documents in Social Research
39 Methods of Field Research 3: Using Personal Documents
1(20)
Robert G. Burgess
40 "Dear Researcher": The Use of Correspondence as a Method within Feminist Qualitative Research
21(18)
Gayle Letherby
Dawn Zdrodowski
41 Documents in Action I: Documents in Organizational Settings
39(22)
Lindsay Prior
42 Documents in Action II: Making Things Visible
61(24)
Lindsay Prior
43 The Journal Project: Research at the Boundaries between Social Sciences and the Arts
85(26)
Judith Davidson
44 Thanks for the Memory": Memory Books as a Methodological Resource in Biographical Research
111(20)
Rachel Thomson
Janet Holland
45 Imagining The Sociological Imagination: The Biographical Context of a Sociological Classic
131(18)
John D. Brewer
46 Introduction to Stalking Sociologists
149(8)
M. Keen
47 Filling the Silences? Mass-Observation's Wartime Diaries, Interpretive Work and Indexicality
157(14)
Andrea Salter
48 Autoethnography and Therapy: Writing on the Move
171(16)
Jeannie K. Wright
49 Narratives of the Night: The Use of Audio Diaries in Researching Sleep
187(24)
Jenny Hislop
Sara Arber
Rob Meadows
Sue Venn
50 Making Use of Audio Diaries in Research with Young People: Examining Narrative, Participation and Audience
211(20)
Nancy Worth
51 The Photograph in Theory
231(24)
Elizabeth Chaplin
52 Picture This: Researching Child Workers
255(18)
Angela Bolton
Christopher Pole
Phillip Mizen
53 Mourning the Family Album
273(14)
Tahneer Oksman
54 Good Young Nostalgia: Camera Phones and Technologies of Self among Israeli Youths
287(26)
Ori Schwarz
55 Digital Biography: Capturing Lives Online
313(16)
Paul Longley Arthur
56 Celebrity Bio Blogs: Hagiography, Pathography, and Perez Hilton
329(18)
Elizabeth Podnieks
57 `My Vagina Makes Funny Noises': Analyzing Online Forums to Assess the Real Sexual Health Concerns of Young People
347
Amanda Cohn
Juliet Richters
Volume IV Archival Research
58 Behind the Scenes: Records and Archives
1(24)
Gary McCulloch
59 Secondary Analysis of Archived Data
25(28)
Louise Corti
Paul Thompson
60 Secondary Analysis of Qualitative Data
53(16)
Clive Seale
61 The Ordinariness of the Archive
69(14)
Thomas Osborne
62 Archive
83(10)
Mike Featherstone
63 The Archive, Disciplinarity, and Governing: Cultural Studies and the Writing of History
93(22)
Craig Robertson
64 Ethical Problems in Archival Research: Beyond Accessibility
115(12)
Pamela Innes
65 Archival Research as a Social Process
127(12)
Neal Lerner
66 Keeping the Conversation Going: The Archive Thrives on Interviews and Oral History
139(20)
Brad E. Lucas
Margaret M. Strain
67 Museums, the Sociological Imagination and the Imaginary Museum
159(22)
Gordon J. Fyfe
68 Ilya Neustadt, Norbert Elias, and the Leicester Department: Personal Correspondence and the History of Sociology in Britain
181(20)
John Goodwin
Jason Hughes
69 On Behaviour at Table
201(42)
Norbert Elias
70 On the Relationship between Literature and Sociology in the Work of Norbert Elias
243(20)
Helmut Kuzmics
71 Extracts from Human Documents of the Industrial Revolution in Britain
263(18)
E. Royston Pike
72 Writing to the Archive: Mass-Observation as Autobiography
281(14)
Dorothy Sheridan
73 Using the Mass-Observation Archive as a Source for Women's Studies
295(12)
Dorothy Sheridan
74 Research Methodology in Mass Observation Past and Present: `Scientifically, about as Valuable as a Chimpanzee's Tea Party at the Zoo'?
307(24)
Annebella Pollen
75 Working-Class Identities in the 1960s: Revisiting the Affluent Worker Study
331(18)
Mike Savage
76 Data and Archives: The Internet as Site and Subject
349(12)
Fiona Gill
Catriona Elder
77 Recent Developments in Archiving Social Research
361
Louise Corti
Jason Hughes is Professor and Head of the School of Media, Communication and Sociology at the University of Leicester. His first book, Learning to Smoke (2003, Chicago Press), which synthesised aspects of the work of Howard Becker with that of Foucault and Elias, won the 2006 Norbert Elias prize. He has also coauthored with Ruth Simpson and Natasha Slutskaya Gender, Class and Occupation: Working Class Men Doing Dirty Work (Palgrave, 2016), and, together with Eric Dunning, Norbert Elias and Modern Sociology: Knowledge, Interdependence, Power, Process (Bloomsbury, 2013). Other works include the edited volumes Visual Methods (SAGE, 2012) and Internet Research Methods (SAGE, 2012), and coedited volumes Contemporary Approaches to Ethnographic Research (SAGE, 2018), Documentary and Archival Research (SAGE, 2016), Moral Panics in the Contemporary World (Bloomsbury, 2013), and Communities of Practice: Critical Perspectives (Routledge, 2007). His current research, funded by Cancer Research UK, is investigating the careers of adolescent e-cigarette users. John Goodwin is a Professor of Sociology and Sociological Practice at the University of Leicester. As a sociologist, John has a broad range of research interests including education to work transitions, sociological research methods, and the history of sociology. He is a recognized expert on the life and sociology of Pearl Jephcott, and he also has a significant interest in the works of Norbert Elias, C. Wright Mills, and Stanley Milgram. In terms of his sociological practice, John has expertise in qualitative secondary analysis, restudies, biographical methods, and the use of unconventional data sources in sociological research.