Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Contact
  • Archives
    • Past Issues
    • Current Issue
  • Submissions
  • Policies
  • Contact
Search
  • Register
  • Login
  1. Home /
  2. Archives /
  3. Vol. 7 (2002): Special issue 'Howard Schwartz: Published and Unpublished Papers'

Vol. 7 (2002): Special issue 'Howard Schwartz: Published and Unpublished Papers'

Published: 07.05.2002

Articles

  • Howard Schwartz: An Introduction

    Alex Dennis, Wes Sharrock
    1-6
    • PDF
  • Data: Who Needs It? Describing Normal Environments—Examples and Methods

    Howard Schwartz
    7-32
    • PDF
  • General Features: Theoretical Introduction

    Howard Schwartz
    33-52
    • PDF
  • Phenomenological Reductionism: An Explanation and a Critique

    Howard Schwartz
    53-60
    • PDF
  • Towards a Phenomenology of Projection Errors

    Howard Schwartz
    61-73
    • PDF
  • Understanding 'Misunderstanding'

    Howard Schwartz
    74-86
    • PDF
  • The Psychotherapy of Automobile Repair: Dialogues on Overextended Paradigms

    Howard Schwartz
    87-101
    • PDF
  • The What's New Problem, or Why Are Sociologists So Interested in Deviants?

    Howard Schwartz
    102-106
    • PDF
  • The Logic of First Impressions: Some Major Assumptions

    Howard Schwartz
    107-117
    • PDF
  • Formal Structures and Symbolic Logic

    Howard Schwartz
    118-126
    • PDF
  • Strategies for Automating Office Information: A Comparison

    Howard Schwartz
    127-132
    • PDF
  • The Life History of a Social Norm

    Howard Schwartz
    133-149
    • PDF
  • Max Weber's Concept of Rationality: Some Relevant Concerns

    Howard Schwartz
    150-169
    • PDF
  • The Discipline of Sociology of Language: Is It One or Is It Not?

    Howard Schwartz
    170-171
    • PDF
  • Strange People—Familiar Faces: A Portrait of Universality

    Howard Schwartz
    172-173
    • PDF

about

About the Journal

Ethnographic Studies focuses on work in ethnography and ethnomethodology but it also provides a forum for sympathetic research in other human sciences, such as psychology, history, science and technology studies, and sociology. Its aim is to promote qualitative inquiry. The policy of the journal is to publish empirical studies but also theoretical and philosophical work which relates to current issues and debates in human sciences.

Make a Submission

Make a Submission

ISSN 1366-4964

More information about the publishing system, Platform and Workflow by OJS/PKP.