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E-raamat: Documentary Research: In Education, History and the Social Sciences

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Documentary research involves the use of texts and documents as source materials: government publications, newspapers, certificates, census publications, novels, film and video, paintings, personal photographs, diaries and innumerable other written, visual and pictorial sources in paper, electronic, or other `hard copy form. Along with surveys and ethnography, documentary research is one of the three major types of social research and arguably has been the most widely used of the three throughout the history of sociology and other social sciences. It has been the principal method - indeed, sometimes the only one - for leading sociologists. The key issues surrounding types of documents and our ability to use them as reliable sources of evidence on the social world must be considered by all who use documents in their research. The paucity of sources available until now means that this compendium will be invaluable to social researchers. Volume One: Theory and MethodsVolume Two: Personal DocumentsVolume Three: Mass Media and Cyber DocumentsVolume Four: Official Statistics and Sources Documentary research is one of the three major types of social research and arguably has been the most widely used of the three throughout the history of sociology and other social sciences. The key issues surrounding types of documents and our ability to use them as reliable sources of evidence on the social world must be considered by all who use documents in their research. VOLUME ONE: Theory and Methods in Documentary ResearchVOLUME TWO: Personal Documents: Autobiographies, Letters and PhotographsVOLUME THREE: Published Sources, the Mass Media and Cyber DocumentsVOUME FOUR: Official Reports, Administrative Records and Official Statistics
Appendix of Sources xi
Editor's Introduction: Documentary Research xix
John Scott
PART ONE THEORY AND METHODS IN DOCUMENTARY RESEARCH
Social Research and Documentary Sources
3(20)
John Scott
Assessing Documentary Sources
23(20)
John Scott
The Historian and the Historical Documents
43(40)
Louis Gottschalk
Evidence and Proof in Documentary Research: Part I, Some Specific Problems of Documentary Research
83(22)
Jennifer Platt
Evidence and Proof in Documentary Research: Part II, Some Shared Problems of Documentary Research
105(14)
Jennifer Platt
Analysing Cultural Objects: Content Analysis and Semiotics
119(16)
Don Slater
Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches to Content Analysis
135(26)
Alexander L. George
Techniques of Content Analysis
161(36)
Robert P. Weber
Analytical Techniques
197(12)
Klaus Krippendorff
Discourse Analysis
209(24)
Rosalind Gill
Encoding/Decoding
233(14)
Stuart Hall
Framing Processes and Social Movements: An Overview and Assessment
247(36)
Robert D. Benford
David A. Snow
Life Stories and the Narrative Turn
283(26)
Ken Plummer
Introduction to the Structural Analysis of Narratives
309(34)
Roland Barthes
Demystifying Cosmopolitan:Five Critical Methods
343(16)
Ellen McCracken
Semiology and Visual Interpretation
359
Norman Bryson
PART TWO PERSONAL DOCUMENTS: AUTOBIOGRAPHIES, LETTERS, AND PHOTOGRAPHS
The Forms of Personal Documents
3(44)
Gordon W. Allport
The Use of Human Documents
47(22)
Herbert Blumer
Comment on Blumer's Analysis
69(6)
William I. Thomas
Comment on Blumer's Analysis
75(10)
Florian Znaniecki
A Critical Review of the Development of the Personal Document Method in Sociology 1920-1940
85(58)
Robert Angell
Deconstructing the Monolithic Phallus
143(16)
Lesley A. Hall
Maternal Relations: Moral Manliness and Emotional Survival in Letters Home During the First World War
159(22)
Michael Roper
`Something Sensational ...': The Sexual Diary as a Tool for Mapping Detailed Sexual Behaviour
181(14)
Tony Coxon
The Modernisation of Gay and Lesbian Stories
195(26)
Ken Plummer
The Autobiography of the Working Class
221(22)
John Burnett
Harriet Jacobs, Frederick Douglass, and the Slavery Debate: Bondage, Family, and the Discourse of Domesticity
243(26)
Donald B. Gibson
Family Photography
269(20)
Christopher Musello
Reframing the Human Family Romance
289(40)
Marianne Hirsch
Reconstruction Work: Images of Post-War Black Settlement
329(16)
Stuart Hall
PART THREE PUBLISHED SOURCES, THE MASS MEDIA, AND CYBER DOCUMENTS
Some Comments on the Use of Directories in Research on Elites, with Particular Reference to the Twentieth-Century Supplements of the Dictionary of National Biography
345(12)
Colin Bell
The Taken-for-Granted Reference: An Empirical Examination
357(20)
Ellis Thorpe
Distribution of Space in National Newspapers
Political and Economic Planning
377
PART THREE PUBLISHED SOURCES, THE MASS MEDIA, AND CYBER DOCUMENTS
Rhetorical Vision of Men and Women Managers in Singapore
3(16)
S. K. Jean Lee
Tan Hwee Hoon
Introduction to A Magazine of Their Own
19(22)
Margaret Beetham
Two-dimensional Visual Data: Images, Signs and Representations
41(58)
Michael Emmison
Phillip Smith
Maps, Knowledge, and Power
99(30)
John B. Harley
Imagery and Ideology: The Cover Photographs of Traditional Women's Magazines
129(16)
Marjorie Ferguson
Signs Address Somebody
145(42)
Judith Williamson
The Mortise and the Frame: Reification and Advertising Form
187(26)
Robert Goldman
The Codes of Overt Advertisements
213(36)
Ellen McCracken
Semiotics, Structuralism, and Television
249(36)
Ellen Seiter
Studies in Radio and Film Propaganda
285(24)
Robert K. Merton
Paul F. Lazarsfeld
Refugees, Migrants and the Fall of the Berlin Wall
309(16)
Greg McLaughlin
Dallas and Feminism
325(16)
Len Ang
A Tale of Two Aesthetics
341(28)
Sherry Turkle
Identity Construction and Self-Presentation on Personal Homepages: Emancipatory Potentials and Reality Constraints
369
Charles Cheung
PART FOUR OFFICIAL RECORDS, REPORTS, AND STATISTICS
Official Discourse
3(32)
Frank Burton
Pat Carlen
Census Reports as Documentary Evidence: The Census Commentaries 1801-1951
35(30)
Catherine Hakim
Themes and Variations in Record-Keeping
65(18)
Stanton Wheeler
The Analysis of Company Documentation
83(24)
Nick Forster
Method and Measurement in the Study of Property
107(8)
John Scott
Some Notes on Record Taking and Making in an Antenatal Clinic
115(16)
Sally Macintyre
Research Based on Administrative Records
131(32)
Catherine Hakim
Practices of Reading and Writing: The Constitutive Role of the Patient Record in Medical Work
163(28)
Marc Berg
A Minor Office: The Variable and Socially Constructed Character of Death Certification in a Scottish City
191(26)
Michael Bloor
Making Sense of the Census in Britain and the U.S.A.: The Changing Occupational Classification and the Position of Nurses
217(30)
Celia Davies
A Note on the Uses of Official Statistics
247(14)
John I. Kitsuse
Aaron V. Cicourel
On the Sociology of Suicide
261(10)
J. Maxwell Atkinson
The Sociological Analysis of Social Meanings of Suicide
271(34)
Jack D. Douglas
Criminal Statistics and Sociological Explanations of Crime
305(44)
Paul Wiles
How Official Statistics are Produced: Views from the Inside
Government Statisticians' Collective
327(22)
Sexism in Official Statistics
349(20)
Ann Oakley
Robin Oakley
Why Don't Sociologists Make More Use of Official Statistics?
369
Martin Bulmer


John Scott is an Honorary Professor at the Universities of Essex, Exeter, and Copenhagen. He was formerly a professor of sociology at the Universities of Essex and Leicester, and pro-vice-chancellor for research at the University of Plymouth. He has been president of the British Sociological Association, Chair of the Sociology Section of the British Academy, and in 2013 was awarded the CBE for Services to Social Science. His work covers theoretical sociology, the history of sociology, elites and social stratification, and social network analysis. His most recent books include British Social Theory: Recovering Lost Traditions before 1950 (SAGE, 2018), Envisioning Sociology. Victor Branford, Patrick Geddes, and the Quest for Social Reconstruction (with Ray Bromley, SUNY Press, 2013), Objectivity and Subjectivity in Social Research (with Gayle Letherby and Malcolm Williams, SAGE, 2011).