From Reproducible to Productive

The very idea of a "canonical data set" implies a whole organization of knowledge: first, the data are durably available—a quarter-century on—thanks among other things to the institutional continuity of the GSS as an important large-scale data-collection enterprise of American social scien...

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Main Author: Andrew Goldstone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures at McGill University
Series:Journal of Cultural Analytics
Online Access:http://culturalanalytics.scholasticahq.com/article/11821-from-reproducible-to-productive.pdf
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spelling doaj-e53532b5443b41cda1960b16a758ee932020-11-25T01:28:18ZengDepartment of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures at McGill UniversityJournal of Cultural Analytics2371-4549From Reproducible to ProductiveAndrew GoldstoneThe very idea of a "canonical data set" implies a whole organization of knowledge: first, the data are durably available—a quarter-century on—thanks among other things to the institutional continuity of the GSS as an important large-scale data-collection enterprise of American social science; second, the data remain meaningful, their validity underwritten by the methods of survey research; third, the disciplinary norms of sociology allow for the possibility of following on someone else's work by reusing the evidence they have already selected; fourth, that evidence can still bear on a significant research question within sociology, a testament to the fruitfulness of the research program in cultural taste and social structure which was set in motion, notably, by the Anglophone reception of Pierre Bourdieu's Distinction. Lizardo and Skiles's starting point, in other words, includes not simply the dataset itself but all the institutional conditions for a productive ongoing research program involving quantitative analysis of cultural data.http://culturalanalytics.scholasticahq.com/article/11821-from-reproducible-to-productive.pdf
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language English
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author Andrew Goldstone
spellingShingle Andrew Goldstone
From Reproducible to Productive
Journal of Cultural Analytics
author_facet Andrew Goldstone
author_sort Andrew Goldstone
title From Reproducible to Productive
title_short From Reproducible to Productive
title_full From Reproducible to Productive
title_fullStr From Reproducible to Productive
title_full_unstemmed From Reproducible to Productive
title_sort from reproducible to productive
publisher Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures at McGill University
series Journal of Cultural Analytics
issn 2371-4549
description The very idea of a "canonical data set" implies a whole organization of knowledge: first, the data are durably available—a quarter-century on—thanks among other things to the institutional continuity of the GSS as an important large-scale data-collection enterprise of American social science; second, the data remain meaningful, their validity underwritten by the methods of survey research; third, the disciplinary norms of sociology allow for the possibility of following on someone else's work by reusing the evidence they have already selected; fourth, that evidence can still bear on a significant research question within sociology, a testament to the fruitfulness of the research program in cultural taste and social structure which was set in motion, notably, by the Anglophone reception of Pierre Bourdieu's Distinction. Lizardo and Skiles's starting point, in other words, includes not simply the dataset itself but all the institutional conditions for a productive ongoing research program involving quantitative analysis of cultural data.
url http://culturalanalytics.scholasticahq.com/article/11821-from-reproducible-to-productive.pdf
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