Talk and taxonomy : a methodological comparison of ethnosemantics and ethnomethodology with reference to terms for Canadian doctors
pbk.
Peter Eglin
The thesis of this essay is that social or cultural competence consists more of an interpretive or methodological ability to use language in the service of interaction than of a substantive knowledge of collections of cultural categories and of the semantic relations between the terms naming those categories.
「Nielsen BookData」より
[目次]
1. Preface, pv
2. List of Tables, pviii
3. List of Figures, pviii
4. Part One. Programmatics: the logical and methodological adequacy of ethnosemantics and ethnomethodology as sociologies attempting to account for cultural competence, p1
5. 1. Introduction, p1
6. 2. Regularities, rules and instructions: three sociologies, p7
7. 3. Ethnosemantics as semantic sociology and ethnomethodology as interpretive sociology, p19
8. 4. Leaving out the interpreter's work: a methodological critique of ethnosemantics based on ethnomethodology, p27
9. 5. Conclusion, p47
10. Part Two. Data: using the same materials, an ethnosemantic study, and an ethnomethodological study, of cultural competence, p51
11. 6. Introduction, p51
12. 7. Terms for Canadian doctors: ethnosemantics and taxonomy, p55
13. 8. Terms for Canadian doctors: ethnomethodology and talk, p67
14. 9. Conclusion, p81
15. Epilogue: the question of interpretive method, p85
16. Footnotes, p89
17. References, p95
18. Appendix, p119
19. List of Tables
20. Table 1. One Line From the Chart of Reference Terms for Lawyers, p55
21. Table 2. Chart of Reference Terms for Canadian Doctors, p58
22. Table 3. Code of Semantic Dimensions, p60
23. List of Figures
24. Figure 1. The Semiotic Triangle in Ethnosemantics, p32
25. Figure 2. Partial Taxonomy of Terms for Canadian Doctors, p63
「Nielsen BookData」より
書名
Talk and taxonomy : a methodological comparison of ethnosemantics and ethnomethodology with reference to terms for Canadian doctors