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Cultural Sociology
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Introduction: Rethinking Qualitative and Quantitative Methods

Shinobu Majima

Gakushuin University, shinobu.majima{at}manchester.ac.uk

Niamh Moore

University of Manchester, niamh.moore{at}manchester.ac.uk

This article introduces the symposium issue on `Narrative, Numbers and Socio-Cultural Change'.The articles were all papers presented initially at the conference `Narrative, Numbers and Social Change' at the University of Manchester, UK in November 2007.The conference was organized through the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) funded Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change (CRESC). Methodological issues have been central to CRESC since its inception, and the Centre has an ongoing commitment to nurturing methodological expertise and innovation in the study of socio-cultural change. This particular event marked an interest in rethinking the boundaries of qualitative and quantitative research and in developing methods adequate to the challenges posed by socio-cultural complexity, in ways which involve reworking some of the conventional understandings of the relationships between the empirical, the theoretical and methodology. The introduction reviews the articles and reflects on their significance in the context of understandings of methods in cultural sociology and the sociology of culture, in the UK and beyond.

Key Words: Actor Network Theory • empirical • methods • qualitative • quantitative • science and technology studies • socio-cultural change • social change • Bourdieu • Latour

Cultural Sociology, Vol. 3, No. 2, 203-216 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1749975509105531


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