The Practical Accomplishment of Everyday Activities Without Sight

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportAntologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

The Practical Accomplishment of Everyday Activities Without Sight. / Due, Brian Lystgaard.

Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2024. 258 s. (Directions in Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis ).

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportAntologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Due, BL 2024, The Practical Accomplishment of Everyday Activities Without Sight. Directions in Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis , Taylor and Francis/Routledge. <https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781003156819/practical-accomplishment-everyday-activities-without-sight-brian-due>

APA

Due, B. L. (2024). The Practical Accomplishment of Everyday Activities Without Sight. Taylor and Francis/Routledge. Directions in Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781003156819/practical-accomplishment-everyday-activities-without-sight-brian-due

Vancouver

Due BL. The Practical Accomplishment of Everyday Activities Without Sight. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2024. 258 s. (Directions in Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis ).

Author

Due, Brian Lystgaard. / The Practical Accomplishment of Everyday Activities Without Sight. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2024. 258 s. (Directions in Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis ).

Bibtex

@book{e0366358b8d54e5198d774e774f3d30e,
title = "The Practical Accomplishment of Everyday Activities Without Sight",
abstract = "This book is about the everyday life of people with visual impairment or blindness. Using video ethnographic methods and ethnomethodological conversation analysis, it unpacks the practical accomplishments of everyday activities such as navigating in public space, identifying objects and obstacles, being included in workplace activities, interacting with guide dogs, or interacting in museums or classes in school.Navigation, social inclusion, and the world of touch constitute key phenomena that are affected by visual impairment and which we study in this book. Whereas sighted people use their sight for navigating, for figuring out the location of co-participants and the embodied cues they produce, and for achieving understanding of objects in the world, visually impaired people on the contrary cannot rely on vision for navigating, for interpreting embodied cues, or for identifying or recognizing objects. Other sensory resources and other practices are employed to accomplish these basic human actions. The chapters in this book present examples and findings relevant to these issues and draw out the general theoretical implications of these findings. Whereas existing research often studies visual impairment from a medical, cognitive, and psychological perspective, this book provides insights into how visually impaired people accomplish ordinary activities in orderly, organized ways by a detailed study of their actions. While most books describe cognitive and biological issues, many of them using experimental methods, this book provides empirical findings about the actual daily lives as it naturally unfolds based on video recordings. The book contributes insights into the practices of living with visual impairment as well as perspectives for rethinking some of the most basic aspects of human sociality, including perception, interaction, multisensoriality and ocularcentrism (the view that the world is de facto designed by and for sighted persons). As such, the book provides novel findings in the field of ethnomethodological conversation analysis.Renewing the social model of disability, this book will appeal to scholars of sociology with interests in ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, the emergence of practical skills, and understandings of disability in terms of relations between the individual and the social environment.",
author = "Due, {Brian Lystgaard}",
year = "2024",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-0-367-74257-7",
series = "Directions in Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis ",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis/Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - The Practical Accomplishment of Everyday Activities Without Sight

AU - Due, Brian Lystgaard

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - This book is about the everyday life of people with visual impairment or blindness. Using video ethnographic methods and ethnomethodological conversation analysis, it unpacks the practical accomplishments of everyday activities such as navigating in public space, identifying objects and obstacles, being included in workplace activities, interacting with guide dogs, or interacting in museums or classes in school.Navigation, social inclusion, and the world of touch constitute key phenomena that are affected by visual impairment and which we study in this book. Whereas sighted people use their sight for navigating, for figuring out the location of co-participants and the embodied cues they produce, and for achieving understanding of objects in the world, visually impaired people on the contrary cannot rely on vision for navigating, for interpreting embodied cues, or for identifying or recognizing objects. Other sensory resources and other practices are employed to accomplish these basic human actions. The chapters in this book present examples and findings relevant to these issues and draw out the general theoretical implications of these findings. Whereas existing research often studies visual impairment from a medical, cognitive, and psychological perspective, this book provides insights into how visually impaired people accomplish ordinary activities in orderly, organized ways by a detailed study of their actions. While most books describe cognitive and biological issues, many of them using experimental methods, this book provides empirical findings about the actual daily lives as it naturally unfolds based on video recordings. The book contributes insights into the practices of living with visual impairment as well as perspectives for rethinking some of the most basic aspects of human sociality, including perception, interaction, multisensoriality and ocularcentrism (the view that the world is de facto designed by and for sighted persons). As such, the book provides novel findings in the field of ethnomethodological conversation analysis.Renewing the social model of disability, this book will appeal to scholars of sociology with interests in ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, the emergence of practical skills, and understandings of disability in terms of relations between the individual and the social environment.

AB - This book is about the everyday life of people with visual impairment or blindness. Using video ethnographic methods and ethnomethodological conversation analysis, it unpacks the practical accomplishments of everyday activities such as navigating in public space, identifying objects and obstacles, being included in workplace activities, interacting with guide dogs, or interacting in museums or classes in school.Navigation, social inclusion, and the world of touch constitute key phenomena that are affected by visual impairment and which we study in this book. Whereas sighted people use their sight for navigating, for figuring out the location of co-participants and the embodied cues they produce, and for achieving understanding of objects in the world, visually impaired people on the contrary cannot rely on vision for navigating, for interpreting embodied cues, or for identifying or recognizing objects. Other sensory resources and other practices are employed to accomplish these basic human actions. The chapters in this book present examples and findings relevant to these issues and draw out the general theoretical implications of these findings. Whereas existing research often studies visual impairment from a medical, cognitive, and psychological perspective, this book provides insights into how visually impaired people accomplish ordinary activities in orderly, organized ways by a detailed study of their actions. While most books describe cognitive and biological issues, many of them using experimental methods, this book provides empirical findings about the actual daily lives as it naturally unfolds based on video recordings. The book contributes insights into the practices of living with visual impairment as well as perspectives for rethinking some of the most basic aspects of human sociality, including perception, interaction, multisensoriality and ocularcentrism (the view that the world is de facto designed by and for sighted persons). As such, the book provides novel findings in the field of ethnomethodological conversation analysis.Renewing the social model of disability, this book will appeal to scholars of sociology with interests in ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, the emergence of practical skills, and understandings of disability in terms of relations between the individual and the social environment.

M3 - Anthology

SN - 978-0-367-74257-7

T3 - Directions in Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis

BT - The Practical Accomplishment of Everyday Activities Without Sight

PB - Taylor and Francis/Routledge

ER -

ID: 374836560