The Research Act The Research Act A Theoretical Introduction to Sociological Methods Second Edition Norman K. Denzin University of Illinois, Urbana McGRAW-HILL BOOK COMPANY New York St. Louis San Francisco Auckland Bogota DUsseldorf Johannesburg London Madrid Mexico Montreal New Delhi Panama Paris Siio Paulo Singapore Sydney Tokyo Toronto Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Denzin, Norman K. The research act. Bibliography: p. Includes Index. I. Sociology-Methodology. 2. Sociological Research. I. Title. HM 24.D44 1978 301 '.01 '8 78-4872 ISBN 0-07-016361-8 THE RESEARCH ACT A Theoretical Introduction to Sociological Methods Copyright © 1978 by McGraw-Hill, Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright © 1970 by Norman K. Denzin. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. 1234567890 FGRFGR 78321098 This book was set in Times Roman by Black Dot, Inc. The editors were Donald W. Burden, Lyle Linder, and Susan Gamer; the cover was designed by Charles A. Carson; the production supervisor was Dominick Petrellese. Fairfield Graphics was printer and binder. See Acknowledgments for Quotations on pages 355-356. Copyrights are included on this page by reference. Contents Preface vii 1 THE INTERACTIONIST PERSPECTIVE AND THE PROCESS OF THEORY CONSTRUCTION 1 A Point of View 3 2 Sociological Theory 36 2 THEORY TO METHOD: STRATEGIES FOR OBSERVING, SAMPLING, RECORDING, AND INTERVIEWING 3 Naturalistic Inquiry 77 4 The Sociological Interview 112 3 THEORY TO METHOD: RESEARCH STRATEGIES 5 The Experiment and Its Variations 137 6 The Social Survey and Its Variations 157 7 Participant Observation: Varieties and Strategies of the Field Method 182 8 The Comparative Life History Method 214 9 Unobtrusive Measures: The Quest for Triangulated and Nonreactive Methods of Observation 256 4 TRIANGULATION AND THE DOING OF SOCIOLOGY 10 Strategies of Multiple Triangulation 291 11 On the Ethics and Politics of Sociology 308 References 337 Acknowledgments for Quotations 355 Indexes 357 Name Index Subject Index v Preface In this book and its companion, Sociological Methods (2d edition, McGraw Hill, 1978), I offer a symbolic-interactionist view of sociological theory and research methodology. If sociologists are to bridge the gap that exists between their methods, their theories, and their areas of substantive expertise, they must adopt a common theoretical frame that judges these activities from the same perspective. Symbolic interactionism-which stresses the self-reflexive nature of everyday and scientific conduct-provides such a frame, for it proposes that the research act is, itself, an instance of symbolic interaction. The sociologist, like everyday interactants, organizes conduct on the basis of negotiated, sometimes unpredicted events. The research act revolves around such interactions, and they constitute a continual focus of this second edition of The Research Act. This edition carries forth the themes of the first edition, giving greater emphasis to the logic of the naturalistic method of inquiry and stressing more forcefully the logic of the historical and comparative method. Standard meth odological issues involved in sampling theory and statistical measurement are given less attention in this edition. It is hoped that the perspective and problems treated in this book will shed new light on old issues and will lead sociologists to better link their vague images of reality with those research activities that bring theory and method back together again. The "new sociology," if there is to be one, will weave these elements of the research act into a single fabric, and that fabric will join the sociological community with the diverse worlds of human interaction. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I wish to thank the following people for their assistance, comments, and suggestions: Catherine Daubard, Irwin Deutscher, William Filstead, Susan Gamer, Richard J. Hill, Lyle Linder, Peter Manning, Alexander J. Morin, and Julian Roebuck. Conversations with Norbert Wiley influenced my entire conception of the research act; they are hereby acknowledged. Norman K. Denzin vii The Research Act Continuous advance in science has been possible only when analysis of the objects of knowledge has supplied not elements of meanings as the objects have been conceived but elements abstracted from those mean ings. That is, scientific advance implies a willingness to remain on terms of tolerant acceptance of the reality of what cannot be stated in the accepted doctrine of the time, but what must be stated in the form of contradiction with those accepted doctrines. George Herbert Mead In Creative Intelligence: Essays in the Pragmatic Attitude, p. 173. The most important advice I can give the contemporary sociologist has nothing to do with the validity of my arguments. It is this: you do not have to believe anything about theory and methodology that is told you pretentiously and sanctimoniously by other sociologists-including my self. So much guff has gotten mixed with the truth that, if you cannot tell which is which, you had better reject it all. It will only get in your way. No one will go far wrong theoretically who remains in close touch with and seeks to understand a body of concrete phenomena. George Caspar Romans In Handbook of Modern Sociology, pp. 975-976. Part One The Interactionist Perspective and the Process of Theory Construction Chapter 1 A Point of View Nor is it enough to say that research and theory must be married if sociology is to bear legitimate fruit. They must not only exchange solemn vows-they must know how to carry on from there. Their reciprocal roles must be clearly defined. Robert K. Merton (1967, p. 171) We can, and I think must, look upon human life as chiefly a vast interpretative process in which people, singly and collectively, guide themselves by defining the objects, events, and situations which they encounter. ... Any scheme designed to analyze human group life in its general character has to fit this process of interpretation. Herbert Blumer (1956, p. 686) The sociological enterprise rests on three interrelated activities: theory, research, and substantive interest. The current state of the discipline reflects this three-part division. Texts, monographs, and readers respectively display concern for theory, research methods, and substantive speciality, whether that speciality be deviance, family sociology, medical sociology, social psychology, education, or race and ethnic relations. This division has created unfortunate consequences for the discipline of sociology. It has produced a breach between these inseparable components of the sociological act. Theory cannot be judged independently of research activity. Research methods are of little use until they 3
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