Hello,
I am currently writing up my ethnographic-based PhD but I have found I am struggling with write up and was looking from some advice. My main issue is that I fundamentally disagree with a lot of the 'social theory' literature commonly used (e.g. Bourdieu, Butler, extreme constructivism, etc.). I don't want to be in the situation of defending my thesis in a viva using theories that I don't particularly agree with, but I am also finding it difficult to find theorists/frameworks who work well with my thesis.
I have written and scrapped several draft chapters, mostly because I have gone down one theoretical path, only to realise I don't have faith in it as an overall model. I realise it is common to use multiple theoretic perspectives, but I also feel that mixing-and-matching too much makes the overall thesis appear weak.
Any recommendations on social theorists relevant to ethnography which have more of a 'real world' grounding (apologies for the vagueness) would be appreciated.
Many thanks.
It may not be relevant to your thesis but might the institutionalist ethnographers be useful? Dorothy Smith and followers I mean. I'm just thinking that the ethnographic work I've read using variants of that has been more what it sounds like you are looking for.
Thanks for the suggestions!
It's not so much that the established theory is 'wrong' in an objective sense, since as with a lot of things in social sciences I suppose it's down to perspective and which slant you want to take. I will take a look at the recommendations. Thanks!
You can take a look at Feminist Standpoint Theory, which states that any choice of object of inquiry is influenced by one's standpoint--that is, where one stands in the socio-political world, as well as one's status and standpoint in the material world. It is not as relativistic as it sounds, though. It simply urges people to see the perils of claiming universal objectivity and applicability. They argue that any account/theory can only be partial, which is not a shortcoming since the human world is not so black and white as to be explained with one overarching theory.
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