historical sociological research soc 300 nov 22, 2010 kelly kistner
TRANSCRIPT
Historical Sociological Research
SOC 300Nov 22, 2010Kelly Kistner
Overview
• What is historical sociological research?
• Why do it?• Data• Examples• Tools• Disadvantages• Advantages• My own research
What is it?
“differs substantially … though it overlaps” (Babbie 2010:350)
• Overlaps with field research, content analysis, existing statistics
• Exists in multiple social scientific disciplines
• Often uses a single or small number of case studies
• Affinity for “big questions,” attention to macro phenomena
What is it?
• Often comparative (across cases or across time). Seek “natural experiments”
• Can include relatively contemporary topics• Can be inductive or deductive• Subject to similar considerations of
methodological logic– Is the data representative of the population
in question?
– Is the data appropriate to the research question?
Why do historical research?
• Historical perspective. Hindsight. • Document changes over time• Consider contextual factors bearing
on other correlations• Study larger units of analysis.
“Institutions” (nation states, power or governance structure, classes, culture, religion, economic structure)
Why do historical research?
• Perceive and follow action, processes, and causality
• To consider varied temporal structures of causality– Tornado (quick cause – quick effect)*– Meteorite (quick cause – long, slow effect)*– Earthquake (long , slow cause – quick effect)*– Global warming (long , slow cause – long, slow effect)*– Multi-causal conjuncture, causal chains, path-
dependencies, thresholds, tipping points, critical junctures, creative destruction, dialectics, institutional lag
* Adapted from Pierson (2003)
Data
• Secondary Sources (existing publications)• Existing Statistics• Primary Sources – Correspondence, diaries, oral histories,
charters, contracts, meeting minutes, birth and death certificates, attendance rosters, registries, manuscripts, newspapers, magazines, tax records, property deeds, memoirs, etc.
– Held in archives and museums (national, special collections, private), sometimes in print, increasingly online
Examples
• Marx – Why did capitalism develop?– Capital, property protection, and material means of
production accumulated in emergent bourgeoisie
• Weber – Why did capitalism first develop in Western Europe? – Impact of Protestant religious ideas in contrast to
Catholicism, Confucianism, and Buddhism
• Skocpol on causes of social revolutions – Similarities across France, Russia, China
• Mahoney – Why did Latin American nations with similar backgrounds and resources end up with different modern state structures?
Tools
• Interpretive understanding. “Verstehen”
• Comparison. Similarities, differences.• Ideal Types and Typologies
Disadvantages
• Researcher bias, subjective interpretations
• Hard to evaluate researcher’s rigor where non-systematic methods are used
• Hard to untangle direct causation• Data can be spotty, asymmetrical
between cases, non-representative• Risk of reducing to non-generalizable
“just so” stories
Disadvantages
• Practical considerations– Availability of original sources– Access to sources– Condition of sources (decayed, fragile,
hard to read)– Language – Can be tedious
Advantages
• Can get rich, detailed narratives • Can reconstruct action and processes• Basis for generating new data sets• Researcher can focus on most relevant events• Adaptable• Unobtrusive• Cheap• More intimate materials might be available
(diaries, personal correspondence)• Generally requires no IRB approval
My Research
• Analysis of the making of three dictionaries in mid-late nineteenth century Germany, France, and Britain
1838-1961
1841-1873
1857-1928
Significance of the Dictionaries
• Emerged around the same time, citing same inspiration, goals, and theoretical and methodological guidance from comparative philology/linguistic science
• Early examples of large-scale scientific research and information projects. At a time when the status and practice of science greatly differed across Germany, France, and Britain
Significance of the Dictionaries
• Greatly distinguished in style and scale from earlier forms of dictionary-making
• Each of the three would differ in how they were produced and how they presented information– German dictionary (professionals, most
analytic)– French (individual, most prescriptive)– English (open community, most descriptive)
Significance of the Dictionaries
• Peculiar production model of the OED– Massive global volunteer operation– High internal heterogeneity– Conflict and misunderstanding with external
sponsors– Defies typical “market or hierarchy”
organizational models – Many similarities to “open source” software
production and other internet-facilitated modes of production
Research Questions, Motivations
• Why were these dictionaries produced differently?– Is there a relationship between social structural
differences and the viable means of organization?
• What is the relationship between their production method and presentation style?– Why and how would certain organizational structures
facilitate or hinder the production of certain types of information?
• How was the organizational model of the OED sustainable?– What can we abstract from its model to understand the
proliferation of similar modes of production in the internet age?
Methods
• Secondary Sources, Ideal Types and typologies (comparison, correspondence, correlation)
• Primary source narratives (micro-level action, conflict, decision-making)
Scientific Knowledge Production in mid 19th Century
Autonomy
Professionalization High Low
High
Germany(Internalized)
Britain(Marginalized/Disorganized)
Low
France(Externalized)
Summary of Multi-Level Case Characteristics Germany France BritainOverall character of scientific knowledge production
Internalized
Externalized
Marginalized/Disorganized
Basis for authority
Individual Expertise
State Support Empirical
Production of dictionary
Professional Individual Community
Presentation style Analytic
Prescriptive Descriptive
Primary Source Data
• Personal correspondence; meeting minutes, presentations, and reports of the philological society; original publications by the relevant actors; dictionary word-slips; planning materials; manuscript drafts; commentary on manuscript drafts; contracts; newspaper reports and interviews; reviews; memoranda and formal correspondence; appeals for volunteers; instructions to contributors; record keeping books; budgets; photographs; eulogies; etc.
• Where: Oxford University Press, Bodleian Library, Berlin Staatsbibliothek, Printed “Briefwechsel,” Online, Correspondence with archivists.