首页> 外文OA文献 >Account giving as a fundamental social practice and a central sociological concept: a theoretical and methodological reconceptualisation and a practical exploration in a critical case.
【2h】

Account giving as a fundamental social practice and a central sociological concept: a theoretical and methodological reconceptualisation and a practical exploration in a critical case.

机译:将举报作为基本的社会实践和中心的社会学概念:在危急情况下的理论和方法重新概念化和实践探索。

代理获取
本网站仅为用户提供外文OA文献查询和代理获取服务,本网站没有原文。下单后我们将采用程序或人工为您竭诚获取高质量的原文,但由于OA文献来源多样且变更频繁,仍可能出现获取不到、文献不完整或与标题不符等情况,如果获取不到我们将提供退款服务。请知悉。

摘要

This PhD thesis argues that accounts are influenced by culture, are a fundamental form of social practice by which interaction is accomplished, and thus a central sociological concept. The focus of the thesis is that accounts of time and money are affected by religious belief. It examines and (re)conceptualises the concept of an account. Accounts are re-theorised as taking two forms: rational and rhetorical, with their mediation emphasised as the feature that makes them empirically different. Studies of accounting in religious institutions are critically examined and complemented using research from a neglected (in 'financial' accounting studies) branch of sociological research about accounts as ubiquitous social practices. Time and money are appropriate phenomena to research sociologically because they are relevant to sociological and financial conceptions of an account as numerically accountable phenomena that also have socially meaningful features. Ethnomethodology and institutional ethnography are deployed as two mutual methodological frameworks for researching the social accomplishment of accounts in small-scale interaction and ways in which a complex of wider ruling relations, through institutional discourses, are implicit in accounting interactions, especially in institutional settings.udThe thesis forwards a set of theoretically derived propositions to provide an explanation of accounts that explores their social embeddedness more closely than previous work. Briefly, these are that accounts generally, and particularly as applied to time and money, are a key means to make actions visible; are an attempt to promote a morally worthy self; are culturally relative; give information about the social norms of the social collective; always occur at moral and sometimes institutional interfaces; and are ubiquitous social practices. To provide and interrogate an applied example of these theoretically and methodologically derived propositions about accounts of time and money and how these are affected by culture and beliefs, I use observation, participant observation, analysis of community produced literature, and semi-structured interviews in a critical case study of the Findhorn Foundation. Therein time and money are rhetorically accountable; are indicative of the spiritually influenced moral code of the Findhorn Foundation; and the moral code provides for a vocabulary of motives that members use in order present morally worthy selves. The ideal moral self is culturally relative to the Findhorn Foundation and sets itself in opposition to an ideal type of capitalist production, consumption and generally dominant ways of knowing, being, and organising in industrialised western societies. Rhetorical accounts of time and money pervade rational ones at the organisational level and spiritual principles are blended with business acumen. However, although spiritual principles have epistemological and ontological differences (from dominant ways of doing business in the wider society), they need to be commensurable with the extra-locally produced discourses found within the wider society in order to remain legally viable. Furthermore, tensions around inefficient decision-making processes exist. Accounts are tied to multiple (at times competing) moral codes within Findhorn, and also operate within pragmatically set limits involving disposable resources. This thesis is argued to be a valuable contribution to sociological literature around social accounting in general, and in religious institutions in particular, and contributes to the literature concerning social actors' accounts of their social actions, regardless of the specific setting. That is, these findings are 'about social practices' in general. Succinctly, my thesis puts forward a strong case for seeing accounts as a central sociological concept.
机译:该博士论文认为,账目受文化的影响,是完成互动的社会实践的基本形式,因此是社会学的中心概念。本文的重点是时间和金钱的账目受宗教信仰的影响。它检查并(重新)概念化帐户的概念。账目被重新理论化为两种形式:理性的和修辞的,其强调的调解是使它们在经验上有所不同的特征。宗教机构中会计学的研究受到严格审查,并使用社会学研究中被忽略的(在“财务”会计学中)有关作为普遍存在的社会实践的会计学的研究加以补充。时间和金钱是适合进行社会学研究的现象,因为它们与帐户的社会学和财务概念相关,因为它们既是具有数字含义的现象,又具有社会意义。民族学方法学和制度民族志被部署为两个相互的方法论框架,用于研究小规模互动中账户的社会成就,以及通过制度化的话语,在会计互动中,尤其是在制度环境中,隐含着更广泛的统治关系的复杂方式, ud本文提出了一组理论上衍生的命题,以提供对账目的解释,与以前的工作相比,该账目更能探索其社会嵌入性。简而言之,这些是总体上的帐户,尤其是应用于时间和金钱的帐户,是使操作可见的关键手段。试图提倡道德上有价值的自我;具有文化上的相对性;提供有关社会集体的社会规范的信息;总是发生在道德上,有时是制度上的交往;并且是无处不在的社会实践。为了提供和询问这些关于时间和金钱的理论和方法论命题以及文化和信仰如何影响这些命题的应用实例,我使用观察,参与者观察,社区产生的文献分析和半结构化访谈进行了研究。 Findhorn基金会的关键案例研究。在时间上和金钱上都用口头上负责任;反映了芬德霍恩基金会受精神影响的道德准则;道德守则规定了成员用来表达道德上值得自我的动机词汇。理想的道德自我在文化上与芬德霍恩基金会有关,并且与资本主义生产,消费的理想类型以及在工业化的西方社会中知识,存在和组织的普遍主导方式相对立。时间和金钱的修辞性说明在组织层面普遍存在,而精神原则与商业敏锐性相融合。但是,尽管精神原则在认识论和本体论方面存在差异(来自于更广泛的社会中占主导地位的经商方式),但它们仍需要与更广泛的社会中所产生的本地化话语相称,才能保持法律上的可行性。此外,围绕低效的决策过程存在紧张关系。帐户与芬德霍恩(Findhorn)中的多个(有时是相互竞争的)道德守则相关联,并且在涉及可动用资源的务实设置的限制内运作。该论文被认为对整个社会会计,特别是宗教机构,对社会学文献具有宝贵的贡献,并且对有关社会行为者对其社会行为的叙述,不论其具体背景如何,都具有贡献。也就是说,这些发现通常是关于“社会实践”的。简而言之,我的论文提出了一个强有力的论据,将账目视为社会学的中心概念。

著录项

  • 作者

    MacLennan Steven;

  • 作者单位
  • 年度 2010
  • 总页数
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 {"code":"en","name":"English","id":9}
  • 中图分类

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号