Interpretation and Method Empirical Research Methods and the Interpretive Turn

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MAKING SENSE OF MAKING SENSE 279

implications of taking “the preservation of agency” seriously, the empirical work thus produced
may contribute to a debate about the importance of this philosophical commitment.


NOTES


For helpful feedback and comments on earlier drafts, I would like to thank the editors, Rebecca DeWinter,
Kiran Pervez, and Maia Hallward.



  1. In the German Bundestag a bell is used to call the house to order, much like a gavel is used in U.S.
    parliamentary bodies.

  2. Seating in the Bundestag is by parties along a left-to-right scale, so shouts “from the left” are both
    shouts from the left side of the hall and shouts from the more radical political parties—Social Democrats and
    Communists, in this case.

  3. In this chapter, “occupying Allies” refers to the United States, the United Kingdom, and France. By
    1949, the Soviet Union was an “Ally” only in a very tenuous sense.

  4. Bhaskar and other critical realists, however, fail to maintain a consistent focus on practical discursive
    activities. As Patomäki and Wight argue, critical realists instead talk about “underlying structures, powers,
    and tendencies that exist, whether or not detected or known through experience and/or discourse.” This leads
    them to suspect that “the surface appearance of objectivity, although possessing causal power, is typically
    distinct from its underlying—and potentially hidden, reified, or mystified—essential relations” (Patomäki
    and Wight 2000, 223–35). Their empirical work shifts from a detailed tracing of the patterns of social
    activity to a transcendental explication of the foundational principles putatively governing or underlying
    those patterns. This metaphysical commitment produces several thorny problems (Shotter 1993a, 75–78),
    but one need not adopt the whole critical realist package in order to appreciate its emphasis on active pro-
    cesses of social construction.

  5. Arguably, every political figure in every type of political regime faces this kind of problem (M. Weber
    1976, 122–23). “Legitimation” in this sense has been a concern of philosophers for millennia, forming one
    of those perennial subjects of interest to political and social analysts. But the problem is perhaps particularly
    acute (at least in a technical sense) in a modern industrial democracy with a wide range of public media
    outlets, inasmuch as a plethora of such outlets dramatically expands the arenas and forums within which
    legitimation can take place. This is true even if the country is under military occupation.

  6. This applies regardless of whether the patterns in question are “novel” or not; the reproduction of an
    established convention or pattern of reasons is just as creative an action as the formulation of a radically
    different pattern (Wittgenstein 1953, §232; Winch 1990, 57).

  7. Weber’s argument is, in brief, that “the specific objectivity... which alone appears to be solely
    realizable in the social sciences” is “at base a radicalized subjectivity” (Hennis 1988, 124; emphasis in
    original). For whatever reason, many commentators miss this.

  8. Social action thus has a “metaphorical” character (Ringmar 1996, 68–69), and specific actions draw
    on resources that function not unlike the “policy frames” disclosed by other analysts (see Brandwein, chap-
    ter 12, this volume, and Schmidt, chapter 17, this volume, for examples and elaborations). My focus on the
    prosthetic character of action instead of on the disclosive character of resources is a deliberate effort to
    prevent undue and unnecessary reification of those resources.

  9. Note that scholars of the “role of ideas” also tend to shift the question from a “sociological” one about
    the impact of social actions to an “economic” one about the motivation for those actions (P.T. Jackson
    2002a). But this issue is not my central focus here.

  10. This differs from neopositivist approaches to the extent that the abstract typology in question need
    not involve cross-case correlations between independent and dependent variables. “Class” and “rationality”
    aren’t necessarily variable attributes, and their use in a particular account may well involve less correlating
    and more interpreting according to the decontextualized, abstract template that they provide.

  11. The issue here is not whether notions like “class” or “rationality” can produce useful and illuminating
    analytical insights; if handled ideal-typically, they can certainly do so. The problem is that such insights
    ordinarily come at the cost of the preservation of agency understood as creativity and contingency. See
    below.

  12. Note that “reflexive” ethnography, which deliberately strives to avoid this kind of flat-footed empiri-
    cism, can easily slip off into a kind of single hermeneutic in which the scholar is simply playing with her or

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