Computing in qualitative sociology

1987 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 407-409
Author(s):  
Elihu M. Gerson
1985 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-100
Author(s):  
Elihu M. Gerson

2000 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 566
Author(s):  
Andrea Fontana ◽  
Barry Glassner ◽  
Rosanna Hertz

1986 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 204-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elihu M. Gerson

Author(s):  
Patrick Jagoda

Networks influence practically every subfield of literary studies. Unlike hierarchies and centralized structures, networks connote decentralization and distribution. The abstraction of this form makes it applicable to a wide variety of phenomena. For example, the metaphor and form of the network informs the way we think about communication systems in early American writing, social networks in Victorian novels, transnational circulation in postcolonial literature, and computer networks in late 20th-century cyberpunk fiction. Beyond traditional literary genres, network form is also accessible through comparative media analysis. Films, television serials, video games, and transmedia narratives may represent or evoke network structures through medium-specific techniques. The juxtaposition of different literary and artistic forms, across media, helps to defamiliarize network forms and make these complex structures available to thought. Across subfields of literary studies, critics may be drawn to networks because of their resonance with histories of the present and contemporary technoscience. Scholars may also recognize the sense of complexity and interconnection inherent in networks, which resonates with experiences of intertextuality and close reading itself. In addition to studying representations of networks, literary critics employ a variety of network-related methods. These approaches include historicist scholarship that uses network structures to think about social organization and communication in different eras, quantitative digital humanities tools that map networks of literary circulation, qualitative sociology of literature and reader-response theory that analyze networks of readers and publishers, and formalist work that compares network and aesthetic forms.


1988 ◽  
Vol 11 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 55-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hidetoshi Kato

2017 ◽  
pp. 199
Author(s):  
Héctor Ruiz Arias ◽  
Luis González Bravo

La polémica emic-etic de la sociología cualitativa se reedita desde la investigación empírica y análisis de entrevistas de actores de la vida cotidiana. Como ejemplo, permite presentar una didáctica de construcción de un ensayo sociológico centrado en los conceptos de Estado, Nación y Globalización, caracterizados rudimentariamente por el saber popular de los pasajeros de un taxi colectivo y, al mismo tiempo, contrastados con el saber oficial del cientista social.Palabras clave Emic-etic / sociología cualitativa / ensayo sociológico / Estado, Nación y Globalización / saber popular / cientista social.Abstract:The emic-etic controversy of qualitative sociology is reedited from the empirical investigation and analysis of interviews to daily life actors. As an example, it permits to display a didactics of construction of a sociological essay centered in the concepts of State, Nation and Globalization, rudimentarily characterized with the popular knowledge of the passengers of a taxi and, at the same time, contrasted with the official knowledge of the social scientist.Key words: Emic-etic / qualitative sociology / sociological essay / State, Nation and Globalization / popular knowledge / social scientist


Author(s):  
Social Dynamics Of Generation Exchange In Society ◽  

In this article the author described the style of the analysis of the generation history which has been studied in sociology. This style is considered qualitative sociology style, and its main importance was based with the possibility of how generation changing influenced to the process which happened in society.


2012 ◽  
pp. 68-78
Author(s):  
Marcel Calvez

The article discusses a paradox pointed out by epidemiologists and consisting in the quasi-absence of French sociologists in research on social determinants of health whereas references to Durkheim and Bourdieu are central in that field. It considers the handbooks of medical sociology and sociology of health published since the 1970s and gives an overview of the theoretical frameworks in use in French sociology of health. It examines the formation of this orientation in three periods to which correspond three layers of research topics and approaches: the foundation in the 1960s in which American medical sociology compensates partly the limitations of French sociology, the institutionalization in the 1970s marked by a firm orientation towards qualitative sociology, and the consolidation during the Aids years. These orientations are replaced in their institutional context and related to strategic choices made by researchers.


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