Synopses & Reviews
Ethnomethodology has an elusive relationship with organisation studies. The ethnomethodological work of Harold Garfinkel, and the allied conversation analytic work of Harvey Sacks, is often cited and yet empirical contributions informed by ethnomethodology and conversation analysis remain rare. Organisation studies clearly has a lot to say about work but this is normally related to some broader set of social, economic and political issues. Rarely, if ever, does this research involve an analysis of the mundane and practical details of what actual work consists of. This book acts as an evidence-based corrective by showing how research based on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis can contribute to key issues and debates in organisation studies. Drawing on audio/video recordings from a diverse range of work settings, a team of leading scholars present a series of empirical studies that illustrate the importance of paying attention to the real-time achievement of organisational processes and practices.
Review
"This book would be well suited to researchers from a range of disciplines, as the examples are drawn from the business, educational, and health sciences. It would be particularly useful for qualitative researchers, and also for instructors dealing with qualitative researching in graduate school programs...This is the book that would assist you to master the key practical skills and theoretical approaches necessary to undertake ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, and is well crafted and a pleasure to read."
--Ardhendu Shekhar Singh, Institute of Rural Management - Anand, India, Management Learning
Review
"This book, written by prominent authors in the field...will surely become a household name. The second part of the book, which presents the empirical studies, is simply captivating. This book will certainly end up being a 'classic.'"
--Nicolas Bencherki, Université de Montréal, Scandinavian Journal of Management
Review
"This volume demonstrates the thousands of 'small ways' and 'artful practices' through which people recognize and reproduce the organizational location of their actions. It offers a rich panorama of ethnomethodologically informed studies of ordinary work and in so doing it brings something distinctive to the table of organization studies."
--Silvia Gherardi, University of Trento
Review
"This book is essential reading for researchers and students of organisations, management and business. It reveals the amazing insights generated by researchers applying ethnomethodology, CA, DA and workplace studies to audio and video data from real-time organisational settings. Nick Llewellyn and Jon Hindmarsh deserve congratulations for assembling the very best set of authors to deal with this field. This trailblazing, lucid book will set the standard for years to come."
--David Silverman, Goldsmiths College, University of London
Review
"I cannot overstress how much a gap this book fills, nor how well crafted its papers are. Nick Llewellyn and Jon Hindmarsh are to be congratulated for putting together such a delightful, focused and sophisticated collection of papers. We badly need work on the micro-foundations of organizational behavior, and this splendid book, with its strong ethnomethodological focus, shows how we could study organizations as interactive accomplishments. Supporters of process- and practice-based perspectives, take notice!"
--Haridimos Tsoukas, Athens Laboratory of Business Administration (ALBA) and Warwick Business School
Synopsis
A series of empirical studies illustrating the importance of paying attention to the real-time achievement of organisational processes and practices.
Synopsis
Drawing on audio/video recordings from a diverse range of work settings, a team of leading scholars present a series of empirical studies that illustrate the importance of paying attention to the real-time achievement of organisational processes and practices.
Table of Contents
About the authors; Preface; 1. Work and organisation in real time: an introduction Nick Llewellyn and Jon Hindmarsh; 2. Finding organisation in detail: methodological orientations Jon Hindmarsh and Nick Llewellyn; 3. A kind of governance: rules, time and psychology in organisations Jonathan Potter and Alexa Hepburn; 4. On the reflexivity between setting and practice: the 'recruitment interview' Nick Llewellyn; 5. The situated production of stories David Greatbatch and Timothy Clark; 6. Orders of bidding: organising participation in auction of fine art and antiques Christian Heath and Paul Luff; 7. Some major organisational consequences of some 'minor', organised conduct: evidence from a video analysis of pre-verbal service encounters in a showroom retail store Colin Clark and Trevor Pinch; 8. The work of the work order: document practice in face-to-face service encounters Robert J. Moore, Jack Whalen and E. Cabell Hankinson Gathman; 9. The interactional accomplishment of a strategic plan Dalvir Samra-Fredericks; 10. Peripherality, participation and communities of practice: examining the patient in dental training Jon Hindmarsh; Bibliography; Index.