ABSTRACT

This book examines a range of critical concepts that are central to a shift in the social sciences toward "pragmatic inquiry," reflecting a twenty-first century concern with particular problems and themes rather than grand theory.

Taking a transnational and transdisciplinary approach, the collection demonstrates a shared commitment to using analytical concepts for empirical exploration and a general orientation to research that favors an attention to objects, techniques, and practices. The chapters draw from broad-based and far-reaching social theory in order to analyze new, specific challenges, from grasping the everyday workings of markets, courtrooms, and clinics, to inscribing the transformations of practice within research disciplines themselves. Each contributor takes a key concept and then explores its genealogies and its circulations across scholarly communities, as well as its proven payoffs for the social sciences and, often, critical reflections on its present and future uses.

This carefully crafted volume will significantly expand and improve the analytical repertoires or toolkits available to social scientists, including scholars in sociology or anthropology and those working in science and technology studies, public health, and related fields.

part 1|38 pages

Institutions

chapter 1|18 pages

Fields

chapter 2|18 pages

Ecologies of Institutions

part 2|58 pages

Complex objects

chapter 4|12 pages

Assemblage

chapter 5|14 pages

Market Devices

chapter 6|17 pages

Complexity

part 3|58 pages

Framing stances

chapter 7|15 pages

Justification

chapter 8|15 pages

Narrative

chapter 9|26 pages

Qualification

part 4|50 pages

Practices

chapter 10|14 pages

Demonstrating

chapter 11|20 pages

Caring

chapter 12|14 pages

Making Home

part 5|8 pages

Postface

chapter 13|6 pages

Making Sense of Reality Together

Interdisciplinary "Ways of Seeing"