2019
DOI: 10.1108/s0163-239620190000050003
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Overcoming “Analytic Interruptus”: The Genesis, Development, and Future of Generic Social Processes

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Cited by 6 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…We believe that future research might press further than we have in conceiving “dirty work” as a generic social process (Blumer 1969; Grills 2020; McLuhan and Puddephatt 2019; Prus 1996; Puddephatt and McLuhan 2019). Treating “dirty work” as a generic process would allow us to observe how it comes to be identified, defined, re‐evaluated, negotiated, and incorporated into occupational identities, activities, and organizations over time and through careers .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…We believe that future research might press further than we have in conceiving “dirty work” as a generic social process (Blumer 1969; Grills 2020; McLuhan and Puddephatt 2019; Prus 1996; Puddephatt and McLuhan 2019). Treating “dirty work” as a generic process would allow us to observe how it comes to be identified, defined, re‐evaluated, negotiated, and incorporated into occupational identities, activities, and organizations over time and through careers .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…As Zerubavel (2007:142) notes, generic concepts such as this enable us to expand our sociological imagination, and allow fields as close as poker and chess, and as distinct as hustling and medicine, to be usefully compared. 4 We believe that future research might press further than we have in conceiving "dirty work" as a generic social process (Blumer 1969;Grills 2020;McLuhan and Puddephatt 2019;Prus 1996;Puddephatt and McLuhan 2019). Treating "dirty work" as a generic process would allow us to observe how it comes to be identified, defined, re-evaluated, negotiated, and incorporated into occupational identities, activities, and organizations over time and through careers.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Grills uses these elements of social process to facilitate his aim of “pursuing transcontextuality” through the identification of generic social processes (Grills 2020). As Lofland (1976:31) notes, this involves “conceiving of a situation generically” and answering the question “of what abstract, sociologically conceived class of situation is this particular situation an instance?” The focus on generic social processes and transcontextuality is designed to deliver a more fulsome conceptualization of the social condition by providing a corrective to the “analytic interruptus” (Lofland 1970:34; McLuhan and Puddephatt 2019) which occurs in studies that stop with a description of the particular and fail to connect the findings with the larger dynamics of human group life.…”
Section: Contributions Of This Special Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As McLuhan and Puddephatt (2019) have suggested, attending to GSPs offers something of a corrective to what Lofland (1970) describes as “analytic interruptus”—where the analysis of the setting at hand stalls at the level of the depiction of the particular. What is interrupted is the conceptualization of the social world.…”
Section: Pursuing Transcontextualitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We can have wonderfully and carefully crafted renderings of this or that setting but the relative lack of transcontextual relevance suggests various analogies. Lofland (1976) compares such constructs to “cameos,” McLuhan and Puddephatt (2019) employ the analogy of the “island,” and Zerubavel (2015) uses the term “attentional ghettos.” Each of these analogies addresses a shared problem. Unless interactionist researchers can increase the conceptual relevance of their work, their efforts will remain disconnected from a larger discussion of human group life.…”
Section: Pursuing Transcontextualitymentioning
confidence: 99%