The Promises of Practice

Christopher Gad, Casper Bruun Jensen

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    Abstract

    Practice has become a topic of increasing empirical and conceptual concern within sociology and neighbouring fields. ‘Practice’ can refer to a location or it can refer to action. It is possible to be ‘in practice’, to ‘have a practice’ or to be ‘constituted by practice’. Practice can be a cause, an effect or an explanation. Within science and technology studies (STS), the practice orientation is simultaneously analytical – in the form of various practice theories – and empirical, in that research objects are often defined as ‘practices’. Focusing on a range of examples, especially ethnomethodological, this paper examines some implications and problems that follow when practice slides unnoticed between empirical and conceptual registers. Arguing that a reconsideration of practice thinking is important in order to retain its vigour, we outline a view of practice as a ‘factish’, at once conceptual and empirical, which facilitates analyses of practical ontologies and their transformations. This informs a final discussion of the politics and promises of practice.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TidsskriftSociological Review
    Vol/bind62
    Udgave nummer4
    ISSN0038-0261
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - 2014

    Emneord

    • Practice theories
    • Science and technology studies (STS)
    • Practical ontologies
    • Ethnomethodology
    • Conceptual-empirical interplay

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