Accounting for intimacy troubles : sociological analysis and vernacular discourse

Intimate relations are one of the most analysed aspects of human experience, and sociological interest in this topic has been sustained throughout the history of the discipline. This thesis begins with an analysis of existing sociological claims about intimate relations. It is suggested that these t...

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Main Author: Hill, Thomas Michael
Published: Durham University 2004
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.416671
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4166712015-03-19T05:37:49ZAccounting for intimacy troubles : sociological analysis and vernacular discourseHill, Thomas Michael2004Intimate relations are one of the most analysed aspects of human experience, and sociological interest in this topic has been sustained throughout the history of the discipline. This thesis begins with an analysis of existing sociological claims about intimate relations. It is suggested that these theoretical claims have largely coalesced around the issues of (a) the 'essential basis' of intimacy, and / or (b) the social and historical contexts in which such relationships are enacted. In contradistinction to academic psychology, sociological accounts have typically afforded intimacy troubles a supra-personal quality i.e. as arising from either the contradictory or dualistic nature of intimacy itself, or as a consequence of wider structural changes in specific social and historical locations. However, in making these theoretical claims, sociologists have typically muted or transformed vernacular voices. This study has attempted to identify and analyse a series of vernacular accounts of such intimacy troubles by means of a hybrid of ‘normal science' methodology (Lynch; 1993), and discourse analysis (Potter and Wetherell, 1987; Edwards and Potter, 1992). The data for this analysis comprises instances of Internet communications made over a three-year period within one 'on-line community' (www.divorce-online.co.uk). Three overarching, and highly integrated themes pervaded the exchanges on this Internet site: (a) 'reputation work', (b) the construction of ‘heroic' identities, and (c) a concern with 'moral proceduralism'. It is suggested that these findings carry differentiating and therapeutic implications for existing sociologies of intimacy troubles. The thesis concludes by advocating a turn away from the familiar sociological tendency for abstract theorising in favour of the close analysis of lay accounting for these matters.306.890941Durham Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.416671http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/3075/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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topic 306.890941
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Hill, Thomas Michael
Accounting for intimacy troubles : sociological analysis and vernacular discourse
description Intimate relations are one of the most analysed aspects of human experience, and sociological interest in this topic has been sustained throughout the history of the discipline. This thesis begins with an analysis of existing sociological claims about intimate relations. It is suggested that these theoretical claims have largely coalesced around the issues of (a) the 'essential basis' of intimacy, and / or (b) the social and historical contexts in which such relationships are enacted. In contradistinction to academic psychology, sociological accounts have typically afforded intimacy troubles a supra-personal quality i.e. as arising from either the contradictory or dualistic nature of intimacy itself, or as a consequence of wider structural changes in specific social and historical locations. However, in making these theoretical claims, sociologists have typically muted or transformed vernacular voices. This study has attempted to identify and analyse a series of vernacular accounts of such intimacy troubles by means of a hybrid of ‘normal science' methodology (Lynch; 1993), and discourse analysis (Potter and Wetherell, 1987; Edwards and Potter, 1992). The data for this analysis comprises instances of Internet communications made over a three-year period within one 'on-line community' (www.divorce-online.co.uk). Three overarching, and highly integrated themes pervaded the exchanges on this Internet site: (a) 'reputation work', (b) the construction of ‘heroic' identities, and (c) a concern with 'moral proceduralism'. It is suggested that these findings carry differentiating and therapeutic implications for existing sociologies of intimacy troubles. The thesis concludes by advocating a turn away from the familiar sociological tendency for abstract theorising in favour of the close analysis of lay accounting for these matters.
author Hill, Thomas Michael
author_facet Hill, Thomas Michael
author_sort Hill, Thomas Michael
title Accounting for intimacy troubles : sociological analysis and vernacular discourse
title_short Accounting for intimacy troubles : sociological analysis and vernacular discourse
title_full Accounting for intimacy troubles : sociological analysis and vernacular discourse
title_fullStr Accounting for intimacy troubles : sociological analysis and vernacular discourse
title_full_unstemmed Accounting for intimacy troubles : sociological analysis and vernacular discourse
title_sort accounting for intimacy troubles : sociological analysis and vernacular discourse
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2004
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.416671
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