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Qualitative Research
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Motives and social organization: sociological amnesia, psychological description and the analysis of accounts

William Housley

Cardiff School of Social Sciences, UK, HousleyW{at}cf.ac.uk

Richard Fitzgerald

University of Queensland, Australia, r.fitzgerald{at}uq.edu.au

During the course of this article we explore the sociological tradition of analysing motives and accounts. In doing so we contrast this with more recent methodological developments that have analysed similar phenomena as part of a strategy of respecifying psychological theories of cognition. Through the use of analytic examples we demonstrate how accounts and the invocation of 'inner' or 'underlying' states must be understood not only in terms of situated action but also in terms of the situated accomplishment of social organization. In this way the theoretical amnesia enveloping the analysis of accounts and motives can be confronted and their status as empirical sociological phenomena sustained within future avenues of qualitative research.

Key Words: accounts • cognition • discursive psychology • ethnomethodology • interactionism • membership categorization analysis • motives

Qualitative Research, Vol. 8, No. 2, 237-256 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1468794107087483


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This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Qualitative ResearchHome page
D. Edwards, A. Hepburn, and J. Potter
Psychology, sociology and interaction: disciplinary allegiance or analytic quality? -- a response to Housley and Fitzgerald
Qualitative Research, February 1, 2009; 9(1): 119 - 128.
[PDF]


Home page
Qualitative ResearchHome page
W. Housley and R. Fitzgerald
Beyond the discursive: the case of social organization -- a reply to Edwards, Hepburn and Potter
Qualitative Research, February 1, 2009; 9(1): 129 - 133.
[PDF]