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Constitutive Practices and Garfinkels Notion of Trust: RevisitedLIAS, Institut Marcel Mauss, Paris, anitarod{at}casa1482.fsnet.co.uk This article is intended to reinstate, in at least a prefatory way, some ethnomethodological (EM) considerations concerning trust. The idea of constitutive practices — as it was taken up in Garfinkels sociology — turned on trust as a background condition for mutually intelligible action. Starting with a consideration of Garfinkels 1963 study of trust, the article critically considers some formal analytic alternates to his approach. The aspects of trust that are elusive to the formal-analytic approach are shown to result from its allusive treatment by formal analysis. In Garfinkels hands trust is not elusive. The critique of formal analytic studies builds on Garfinkels writings and certain strands of analytic and ordinary language philosophy. These sources ground the authors suggestion that the study of trust be taken up again, albeit along respecified analytic lines. Examples are given, both of an EM and conversation-analytic (CA) kind.
Key Words: conversation analysis ethnomethodology formal analysis game theory membership categorization ordinary language philosophy rational choice respecification rules trust
Journal of Classical Sociology, Vol. 9, No. 4,
475-499 (2009) |
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