News

05 June 2021
New episode of our podcast series “History and Philosophy of the Language Sciences“
New episode of our podcast series “History and Philosophy of the Language Sciences“

How and why does language change?
Linguist and language historian James McElvenny, together with other language scientists, tackles this question on his blog hiphilangsci.net. Showing and encouraging the diversity of lingistic subjects, McElvenny and his guests explore key developments in language and communication sciences from the perspective of intellectual history: from the grammar in the works of Franz Bopp and Jacob Grimm to Ferdinand de Saussures’ structuralism.
 
James McElvenny is a researcher at the Collaborative Research Center (SFB 1187) „Media of Cooperation“ in Siegen, working in the project„P02 – Media of Praxeology II: History of audio-visual sequence analysis as a methodology“. The podcast is associated with this project which investigates the history of audio-visual sequence analysis across sociology linguistics and allied fields.
 
In the new episode from the 1st of June 2021, McElvenny enters the age of classical structuralism by exploring the phonological research of Roman Jakobson and his colleague Nikolai Trubetzkoy undertaken within the Prague Linguistic Circle.
The podcast series consists currently of 15 episodes which are available online on hiphilangsci.net.
Contact: James McElvenny (james.mcelvenny[æt]mailbox.org)
27 February 2020
Recent book publication: German Edition of Harold Garfinkel`s „Studies in Ethnomethodology“, Edited by Erhard Schüttpelz, Anne Warfield Rawls and Tristan Thielmann
Harold Garfinkel's work "Studies in Ethnomethodology" once revolutionized the social sciences by throwing conventional theories overboard and making everyday human practices the subject of research.
Recent book publication: German Edition of Harold Garfinkel`s „Studies in Ethnomethodology“, Edited by Erhard Schüttpelz, Anne Warfield Rawls and Tristan Thielmann
Harold Garfinkel’s work “Studies in Ethnomethodology” once revolutionized the social sciences by throwing conventional theories overboard and making everyday human practices the subject of research. His thesis is: Social reality is created by everyday practice. Garfinkel focused on routinized practices, that are usually taken for granted. The book, published in the USA in 1967, has long been one of the great classics of the social sciences. With this volume, the groundbreaking study is finally available in a German translation.

German translation by Brigitte Luchesi.

 
The publication can be found HERE.
07 January 2020
Recent book publication: “The History of Gulfport Field 1942” by Harold Garfinkel
Recent book publication: “The History of Gulfport Field 1942” by Harold Garfinkel

Figure: Auto pilot mock-up discussed in „The History of Gulfport Field 1942“

This volume makes available for the first time an unpublished report of wartime research, titled “The History of Gulfport Field 1942”, written by Harold Garfinkel, for the US Army Air Forces (AAF) in 1943. The report has both historical and sociological significance. It has value as a historical document that presents in great detail how AAF personnel involved in training aircraft mechanics at one site (Gulfport Field, Mississippi) managed to contend with the rapid construction and deployment of training necessitated by World War II, with its accompanying shortages of material and experienced trainers, and surpluses of persons to be trained. In the face of shortages, AAF commanders adopted a set of practical aims for the school that downplayed the importance of conventional instruction and relied more on “hands on” practice and “the will to win”. This strategy emphasized a priority of practice over theory that is particularly relevant to the development of Garfinkel’s program of ethnomethodology, his later hybrid studies of work and science, and their relationship to debates in sociology. The book contains a 48-page afterword by Michael Lynch and Anne Rawls.

You can order the facsimile edition (69,00 € incl. VAT) by sending an email to kankers[æt]medienwissenschaft.uni-siegen.de

11 September 2019
Videos of the conference “Computing is Work! are online
Here you can see the recordings of most contributions of the conference "Computing is Work!
Videos of the conference “Computing is Work! are online

Here you can see the recordings of most contributions of the conference “Computing is Work!”, which took place in Siegen from July 6th to July 8th, 2017. Keynote speakers at the conference, which was organized by Thomas Haigh and Sebastian Gießmann, included Matthew Jones (Columbia University) and Fred Turner (Stanford).

 

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