Difference between revisions of "Course:SOCI1110/Harold Garfinkle"
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* 1965 - People begin protesting war | * 1965 - People begin protesting war | ||
* Malcom X is assassinated | * Malcom X is assassinated | ||
− | * 1966 - People | + | * 1966 - People rioting over race |
* 1967 - People are still rioting over race | * 1967 - People are still rioting over race | ||
* Vietnam war becomes even more intense | * Vietnam war becomes even more intense | ||
− | * | + | * 1973 - Vietnam war ends |
+ | * 2011 - Terrorists hijack and crash planes into the World Trade Center | ||
== Publications == | == Publications == |
Revision as of 17:56, 23 October 2016
Harold Garfinkel
American Sociologist, Ethomethodologist, as well as a Professor at the University of California. (October 29,1917 - April 21, 2011)
Biography
Harold Garfkinel was born in Newmark, New Jersey on October 29, 1917. Growing up he lived in Newmark, where his father, Abraham, had a local business selling housewares. Instead of following in his father's footsteps and taking up the family business, he decided to go to the University of Newmark to study business, and accounting. He later developed a deep interest in sociology, and moved on to study that instead. He then went to the University of North Carolina, and earned his master's degree in 1932. In the summer of 1942 Garfinkel started a field study of Bastrop, Texas, and started sociological research for the Army and Navy in Gulfport Field, Mississippi from 1942-1946. From 1951 - 1953 he held a high ranking position at Princeton University. By the time Garfinkel was 35 years old he had written more than twelve impressive manuscripts, all before he earned his PhD at Harvard in the summer of 1952. Garfinkel finally retired from in 1987, but became a professor emeritus in sociology at the University of California, Los Angelas. He was an American Sociologist, Ethomethodologist, as well as a Professor at the University of California. Garfinkel died at the age of 93, in his home in Pacific Palisades, California, due to congestive heart failure. He was survived by his wife, Arlene, his daughter, Leah, and his son, Mark.
Influences
Garfinkel was influenced by Talcott Parsons, and Alfred Schütz. Parsons was a sociologist of the classical tradition, Garfinkel was very fascinated by his research on social order. Schutz was a European scholar which started to introduce Garfinkel into newly important ideas in social theory, psychology and phenomenology.
Early Work
The term Ethnomethodology was invented and created by Harold Garfinkel in 1954. Ethenomethodology examines how human beings communicate while interacting with one another. Garfinkel is well known for his published book called "Studies in Ethnomethodology" in 1967. Which was followed by unpublished articles in two volumes called "Seeing Sociologically" and "Ethnomethodology's Program."
The World Around Him
Harold Garfinkel lived through both world wars. This situates him in many interesting points in history. Even though Garfinkel could not participate in World War One because he was just a baby, by the time World War Two occurred he had become an adult. He enlisted in the military, and conducted sociological research for the Army and Air Force in Gulfport Field, Mississippi, from 1942-1946. As a Jewish man dedicated to racial justice, Garfinkel took his work for the military very seriously. The Second World War actually ended up uniting social scientists. Since the study of social sciences was completely put on hold in occupied Europe, some of Europe's scientists had come to join the research in America. In 1939, the American Sociological Association and its higher ups started to aid the war and peace efforts in both institutional and substantive ways. This helped sociology become a "well-respected and unified science."(Rawls, 2013)
Relevant World Events Durring Garfinkel's Life
- 1917 - America enters WWI
- 1918 - WWI ends
- 1931 - Great Depression at its worst, more that 25% of Americans unemployed
- 1939 - WWII begins in Europe
- 1941 - Pearl Habour is attacked
- America joins the WWII
- 1945 - America drops first atomic bomb on Japan
- WWII ends
- 1949 - NATO is created
- 1950 - Start of the Korean war
- 1961 - Vietnam war begins
- Berlin Wall is built
- 1953 - Vietnam war ends
- 1962 - Cuban Missile Crisis
- 1963 - Present Kennedy is assassinated
- 1965 - People begin protesting war
- Malcom X is assassinated
- 1966 - People rioting over race
- 1967 - People are still rioting over race
- Vietnam war becomes even more intense
- 1973 - Vietnam war ends
- 2011 - Terrorists hijack and crash planes into the World Trade Center
Publications
Harold Garfinkel has published quite a few writtings. One of his most famous writings is
References
Bradley, M. (2009). Vietnam at war. New York: Oxford University Press. Garfinkel, H. (1964). Studies of the Routine Grounds of Everyday Activities. Social Problems, 11(3), 225-250. doi:1. Retrieved from
http://www.jstor.org/stable/798722 doi:1
History.com (2009). Korean war - facts & summary. history.com. Retrieved from http://www.history.com/topics/korean-war Lynch, M. (2011, July 13). Harold Garfinkel obituary. The Guardian. Retrieved from https://www.theguardian.com/education/2011/jul/13/harold-garfinkel-
obituary
US history Timeline: 1900 - 2000. (1950). Retrieved October 24, 2016, from http://faculty.washington.edu/qtaylor/a_us_history/1900_2000_timeline.htm Rawls, A. W. (2013). The early years, 1939-1953: Garfinkel at north Caroline, Harvard and Princeton. Journal of Classical Sociology, 13(2). 303-312.
doi:10.1177/146879x13477292
Weber, B. (2014, September 8). Harold Garfinkel, a common-sense sociologist, dies at 93. U.S. Retrieved from
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/04/us/04garfinkel.html?_r=0
Garfinkel, H., & Rawls, A. (2015). Toward A sociological theory of information. Retrieved from
https://books.google.ca/books?id=OwXvCgAAQBAJ&pg=PT109&lpg=PT109&dq=Harold+garfinkel+bastrop+texas&source=bl&ots=rUJhdW0uZs&sig=M5fBaxsLvh1oFVH7rnSliDALKs8&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjv7_Sj4_HPAhUfHGMKHVErAXoQ6AEIHzAB#v=onepage&q=Harold%20garfinkel%20bastrop%20texas&f=false
In-line Citation: (Garfinkel & Rawls, 2015) Phenomenology online. (2011). Retrieved October 23, 2016, from
http://www.phenomenologyonline.com/scholars/garfinkel-harold/