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PHENOMENOLOGY
Myron Orleans
Encyclopedia of
Sociology
Phenomenology is a movement in
philosophy that has been adapted by certain sociologists to promote an
understanding of the relationship between states of individual
consciousness and social life. As an approach within sociology,
phenomenology seeks to reveal how human awareness is implicated in the
production of social action, social situations and social worlds (Natanson
1970).
Phenomenology was initially
developed by Edmund Husserl (1859-1938), a German mathematician who felt
that the objectivism of science precluded an adequate apprehension of
the world (Husserl 1931, 1970). He presented various philosophical
conceptualizations and techniques designed to locate the sources or
essences of reality in the human consciousness. It was not until Alfred
Schutz (1899-1959) came upon some problems in Max Weber's theory of
action that phenomenology entered the domain of sociology (Schutz 1967).
Schutz distilled from Husserl's rather dense writings a sociologically
relevant approach. Schutz set about describing how subjective meanings
give rise to an apparently objective social world (Schutz, 1962, 1964,
1966, 1970. 1996; Schutz and Luckmann 1973; Wagner 1983).
Schutz's migration to the United
States prior to World War II, along with that of other
phenomenologically inclined scholars, resulted in the transmission of
this approach to American academic circles and to its ultimate
transformation into interpretive sociology. Two expressions of this
approach have been called reality constructionism and
ethnomethodology. Reality constructionism synthesizes Schutz's
distillation of phenomenology and the corpus of classical sociological
thought to account for the possibility of social reality (Berger 1963,
1967; Berger and Berger 1972; Berger and Kellner 1981; Berger and
Luckmann 1966; Potter 1996). Ethnomethodology integrates the Parsonian
concern for social order into phenomenology and examines the means by
which actors make ordinary life possible (Garfinkel 1967; Garfinkel and
Sacks 1970). Reality constructionism and ethnomethodology are recognized
to be among the most fertile orientations in the field of sociology (Ritzer
1996).
Phenomenology is used in two basic
ways in sociology: (1) to theorize about substantive sociological
problems and (2) to enhance the adequacy of sociological research
methods. Since phenomenology insists that society is a human
construction, sociology itself and its theories and methods are also
constructions (Cicourel 1964; 1973). Thus, phenomenology seeks to offer
a corrective to the field's emphasis on positivist conceptualizations
and research methods that may take for granted the very issues that
phenomenologists find of interest. Phenomenology presents theoretical
techniques and qualitative methods that illuminate the human meanings of
social life.
Phenomenology has until recently
been viewed as at most a challenger of the more conventional styles of
sociological work and at the least an irritant. Increasingly,
phenomenology is coming to be viewed as an adjunctive or even integral
part of the discipline, contributing useful analytic tools to balance
objectivist approaches (Aho 1998; Levesque-Lopman 1988; Luckmann 1978;
Psathas 1973; Rogers 1983).
TECHNIQUES
Phenomenology operates rather
differently from conventional social science (Darroch and Silvers 1982).
Phenomenology is a theoretical orientation, but it does not generate
deductions from propositions that can be empirically tested. It operates
more on a metasociological level, demonstrating its premises through
descriptive analyses of the procedures of self-, situational, and social
constitution. Through its demonstrations, audiences apprehend the means
by which phenomena, originating in human consciousness, come to be
experienced as features of the world.
Current phenomenological techniques
in sociology include the method of "bracketing" (Bentz 1995; Ihde 1977).
This approach lifts an item under investigation from its meaning context
in the common-sense world, with all judgments suspended. For example,
the item "alcoholism as a disease" (Peele 1985; Truan 1993) is not
evaluated within phenomenological brackets as being either true or
false. Rather, a reduction is performed in which the item is
assessed in terms of how it operates in consciousness: What does the
disease notion do for those who define themselves within its domain? A
phenomenological reduction both plummets to the essentials of the notion
and ascertains its meanings independent of all particular occasions of
its use. The reduction of a bracketed phenomenon is thus a technique to
gain theoretical insight into the meaning of elements of consciousness.
Phenomenological tools include the
use of introspective and Verstehen methods to offer a detailed
description of how consciousness itself operates (Hitzler and Keller
1989). Introspection requires the phenomenologist to use his or her own
subjective process as a resource for study, while Verstehen
requires an empathic effort to move into the mind of the other (Helle
1991; Truzzi 1974). Not only are introspection and Verstehen
tools of phenomenological analysis, but they are procedures used by
ordinary individuals to carry out their projects. Thus, the
phenomenologist as analyst might study himself or herself as an ordinary
subject dissecting his or her own self-consciousness and action schemes
(Bleicher 1982). In this technique, an analytic attitude toward the role
of consciousness in designing everyday life is developed.
Since cognition is a crucial element
of phenomenology, some theorists focus on social knowledge as the
cornerstone of their technique (Berger and Luckmann 1966). They are
concerned with how common-sense knowledge is produced, disseminated, and
internalized. The technique relies on theoretical discourse and
historical excavation of the usually taken for granted foundations of
knowledge. Frequently, religious thought is given primacy in the study
of the sources and legitimations of mundane knowledge (Berger 1967).
Phenomenological concerns are
frequently researched using qualitative methods (Bogdan and Taylor 1975;
Denzin and Lincoln 1994, 1998). Phenomenological researchers frequently
undertake analyses of small groups, social situations, and organizations
using face-to-face techniques of participant observation (Bruyn 1966;
Psathas and Ten Have1994; Turner 1974). Ethnographic research frequently
utilizes phenomenological tools (Fielding 1988). Intensive interviewing
to uncover the subject's orientations or his or her "life world" is also
widely practiced (Costelloe 1996; Grekova, 1996; Porter 1995).
Qualitative tools are used in phenomenological research either to yield
insight into the microdynamics of particular spheres of human life for
its own sake or to exhibit the constitutive activity of human
consciousness (Langsdorf 1995).
Techniques particular to the
ethnomethodological branch of phenomenology have been developed to
unveil the practices used by people to produce a sense of social order
and thereby accomplish everyday life (Cuff 1993; Leiter 1980; Mehan and
Wood 1975). At one time, "breaching demonstrations" were conducted to
reveal the essentiality of taken-for-granted routines and the means by
which threats to these routines were handled. Since breaching these
routines sometimes resulted in serious disruptions of relationships,
this technique has been virtually abandoned. Social situations are
video- and audiotaped to permit the painstaking demonstration of the
means by which participants produce themselves, their interpretations of
the meanings of acts, and their sense of the structure of the situation
(Blum-Kulka 1994; Jordan and Henderson 1995). Conversational analysis is
a technique that is frequently used to describe how people make sense of
each other through talk and how they make sense of their talk through
their common background knowledge (Psathas 1994; Schegloff and Sacks
1974; Silverman, 1998). The interrelations between mundane reasoning and
abstract reasoning are also examined in great depth as researchers
expose, for example, the socially constituted bases of scientific and
mathematical practice in common-sense thinking (Knorr-Cetina and Mulkay
1983; Livingston, 1995; Lynch, 1993).
THEORY
The central task in social
phenomenology is to demonstrate the reciprocal interactions among the
processes of human action, situational structuring, and reality
construction. Rather than contending that any aspect is a causal factor,
phenomenology views all dimensions as constitutive of all others.
Phenomenologists use the term reflexivity to characterize the way
in which constituent dimensions serve as both foundation and consequence
of all human projects. The task of phenomenology, then, is to make
manifest the incessant tangle or reflexivity of action, situation, and
reality in the various modes of being in the world.
Phenomenology commences with an
analysis of the natural attitude. This is understood as the way
ordinary individuals participate in the world, taking its existence for
granted, assuming its objectivity, and undertaking action projects as if
they were predetermined. Language, culture, and common sense are
experienced in the natural attitude as objective features of an external
world that are learned by actors in the course of their lives.
Human beings are open to patterned
social experience and strive toward meaningful involvement in a knowable
world. They are characterized by a typifying mode of consciousness
tending to classify sense data. In phenomenological terms humans
experience the world in terms of typifications: Children are
exposed to the common sounds and sights of their environments, including
their own bodies, people, animals, vehicles, and so on. They come to
apprehend the categorical identity and typified meanings of each
in terms of conventional linguistic forms. In a similar manner, children
learn the formulas for doing common activities. These practical means of
doing are called recipes for action. Typifications and recipes,
once internalized, tend to settle beneath the level of full awareness,
that is, become sedimented, as do layers of rock. Thus, in the
natural attitude, the foundations of actors' knowledge of meaning and
action are obscured to the actors themselves.
Actors assume that knowledge is
objective and all people reason in a like manner. Each actor assumes
that every other actor knows what he or she knows of this world: All
believe that they share common sense. However, each person's biography
is unique, and each develops a relatively distinct stock of
typifications and recipes. Therefore, interpretations may diverge.
Everyday social interaction is replete with ways in which actors create
feelings that common sense is shared, that mutual understanding is
occurring, and that everything is all right. Phenomenology emphasizes
that humans live within an intersubjective world, yet they at best
approximate shared realities. While a paramount reality is
commonly experienced in this manner, particular realities or finite
provinces of meaning are also constructed and experienced by diverse
cultural, social, or occupational groupings.
For phenomenology, all human
consciousness is practical---it is always of something. Actors intend
projects into the world; they act in order to implement goals based on
their typifications and recipes, their stock of knowledge at
hand. Consciousness as an intentional process is composed of
thinking, perceiving, feeling, remembering, imagining, and anticipating
directed toward the world. The objects of consciousness, these
intentional acts, are the sources of all social realities that are, in
turn, the materials of common sense.
Thus, typifications derived from
common sense are internalized, becoming the tools that individual
consciousness uses to constitute a lifeworld, the unified arena
of human awareness and action. Common sense serves as an ever-present
resource to assure actors that the reality that is projected from human
subjectivity is an objective reality. Since all actors are involved in
this intentional work, they sustain the collaborative effort to reify
their projections and thereby reinforce the very frameworks that provide
the construction tools.
Social interaction is viewed
phenomenologically as a process of reciprocal interpretive constructions
of actors applying their stock of knowledge at hand to the occasion.
Interactors orient themselves to others by taking into account typified
meanings of actors in typified situations known to them through common
sense. Action schemes are geared by each to the presumed projects of
others. The conduct resulting from the intersection of intentional acts
indicates to members of the collectivity that communication or
coordination or something of the like is occurring among them. For these
members, conduct and utterances serve as indexical expressions of
the properties of the situation enabling each to proceed with the
interaction while interpreting others, context, and self. Through the
use of certain interpretive practices, members order the situation for
themselves in sensical and coherent terms: In their talk they gloss over
apparent irrelevancies, fill in innumerable gaps, ignore
inconsistencies, and assume a continuity of meaning, thereby formulating
the occasion itself.
Ongoing social situations manifest
patterned routine conduct that appears to positivist investigators to be
normative or rule-guided. Phenomenologically, rules are indexical
expressions of the interpretive processes applied by members in the
course of their interactions. Rules are enacted in and through their
applications. In order to play by the book, the interpreter endeavors to
use the rule as an apparent guide. However, he or she must use all sorts
of background expectancies to manage the fit somehow between the
particular and the general under the contexted conditions of the
interaction, and in so doing is acting creatively. Rules, policies,
hierarchy, and organization are accomplished through the interpretive
acts or negotiations of members in their concerted efforts to formulate
a sense of operating in accord with a rational, accountable system. This
work of doing structure to the situation further sustains its common-sensical
foundations as well as its facticity.
Phenomenologists analyze the
ordering of social reality and how the usage of certain forms of
knowledge contributes to that ordering. It is posited that typified
action and interaction become habitualized. Through sedimentation
in layered consciousness, human authorship of habitualized conduct is
obscured and the product is externalized. As meaning-striving beings,
humans create theoretical explanations and moral justifications in order
to legitimate the habitualized conduct. Located in higher contexts of
meaning, the conduct becomes objectivated. When internalized by
succeeding generations, the conduct is fully institutionalized and
exerts compelling constraints over individual volition. Periodically,
the institutions might be repaired in response to threats, or
individuals might be realigned if they cognitively or affectively
migrate.
The reality that ordinary people
inhabit is constituted by these legitimations of habitualized conduct.
Ranging from common sense typifications of ordinary language to
theological constructions to sophisticated philosophical, cosmological,
and scientific conceptualizations, these legitimations compose the
paramount reality of everyday life. Moreover, segmented modern life,
with its proliferation of meaning-generating sectors, produces multiple
realities, some in competition with each other for adherents. In the
current marketplace of realities, consumers, to varying degrees, may
select their legitimations, as they select their occupation and,
increasingly, their religion (Berger, 1967).
PRACTICE
Doing phenomenological sociology
involves procedures that are distinct from positivist research.
Phenomenological practice is increasingly evident in the discipline as
more subjectivist work is published. The phenomenological analysis of
mass media culture content, for example, applies the elements of the
approach to yield an understanding of the reflexive interplay of
audience lifeworlds and program material (Wilson 1996). Thus, TV talk
show discourses may be described as social texts that are refracted by
programmers from common sense identity constructs. The visual
realization yields narrative images that audiences are seduced into
processing using their own experiences. The viewers’ lifeworlds and the
TV representations are blended into reality proxies that provide viewers
with schema to configure their personal orientations. Subsequently,
programmers draw upon these orientations as additional identity material
for new content development.
Phenomenological work with young
children examines how both family interactions and the practices of
everyday life are related to the construction of childhood (Davila and
Pearson 1994). It is revealed how the children’s elemental typifications
of family life and common sense are actualized through ordinary
interaction. Penetrating the inner world of children requires that the
phenomenological practitioner view the subjects in their own terms, from
the level and viewpoints of children (Waksler, 1991; Shehan, 1999). Such
investigation shuns adult authoritative and particularly scientific
perspectives and seeks to give voice to the children’s experience of
their own worlds. Infants’ and children’s communicative and interactive
competencies are respected and are not diminished by the drive toward
higher level functioning (Sheets-Johnstone 1996).
At the other end of the lifecycle,
phenomenologists investigate how aging and its associated traumas are
constituted in the consciousness of members and helpers. The struggle
for meaning during aging accompanied by chronic pain may be facilitated
or impaired by the availability of constructs that permit the smoother
processing of the experiences. Members of cultures that stock
typifications and recipes for managing aging and pain skillfully may
well be more likely than others to construct beneficial interpretations
in the face of these challenges (Encandela 1997). Phenomenological work
encourages the helpers of the elderly to gain empathic appreciation of
their clients’ lifeworlds and enhanced affiliation with them through the
use of biographical narratives that highlight their individuality and
humanity (Heliker 1997).
The healing professions,
particularly nursing, seem to be deeply imbued with a phenomenological
focus on the provision of care based on a rigorous emphasis on the
patient’s subjective experience (Benner 1995). Substantial attention has
been devoted to the ethical implications of various disease definitions,
to how language shapes the response to illness, and to how disease
definitions and paradigmatic models impact communication between health
professionals and patients (Rosenberg and Golden 1992). Significant work
on the phenomenology of disability has demonstrated how the lived
body is experienced in altered form and how taken for granted
routines are disrupted invoking new action recipes (Toombs 1995).
Nonconventional healing practices have also been examined revealing how
embodiment and the actor’s subjective orientation reflexively
interrelate with cultural imagery and discourse to transfigure the self
(Csordas 1997). Further, phenomenological work has suggested that
emotions are best analyzed as interpreted processes embedded within
experiential contexts (Blum 1996; Solomon 1997).
IMPLICATIONS
For phenomenology, society, social
reality, social order, institutions, organizations, situations,
interactions, and individual actions are constructions that appear as
suprahuman entities. What does this suggest regarding humanity and
sociology? Phenomenology advances the notion that humans are creative
agents in the construction of social worlds (Ainlay 1986). It is from
their consciousness that all being emerges. The alternative to their
creative work is meaninglessness, solipsism, and chaos: a world of dumb
puppets, in which each is disconnected from the other, and where life is
formless (Abercrombie 1980). This is the nightmare of phenomenology. Its
practitioners fear that positivist sociologists actually theorize about
such a world (Phillipson 1972).
Phenomenologists ask sociologists to
note the misleading substantiality of social products and to avoid the
pitfalls of reification. For the sociologist to view social phenomena
within the natural attitude as objects is to legitimate rather than to
analyze. Phenomenological sociologists investigate social products as
humanly meaningful acts, whether these products are termed attitudes,
behaviors, families, aging, ethnic groups, classes, societies, or
otherwise (Armstrong 1979; Gubrium and Holstein 1987; Herek 1986;
Petersen 1987; Starr 1982). The sociological production of these fictive
entities are understood within the context of their accomplishment, that
is, the interview setting, the observational location, the data
collection situation, the field, the research instrument, and so forth
(Schwartz and Jacobs 1979). The meaning contexts applied by the analyst
correlates with those of the subjects under investigation and explicates
the points of view of the actors as well as express their life world.
Phenomenological sociology strives to reveal how actors construe
themselves, all the while recognizing that they themselves are actors
construing their subjects and themselves.
Phenomenologically understood,
society is a fragile human construction, thinly veneered by abstract
ideas. Phenomenology itself is evaluatively and politically neutral.
Inherently, it promotes neither transformative projects nor
stabilization. In the work of a conservatively inclined practitioner,
the legitimation process might be supported, while the liberative
practitioner might seek to puncture or debunk the legitimations (Morris
1975). Phenomenology can be used to reveal and endorse the great
constructions of humankind or to uncover the theoretical grounds of
oppression and repression (Smart 1976). Phenomenologists insist upon the
human requirements for meaning, subjective connectedess, and a sense of
order. These requirements may be fulfilled within existent or
emancipative realities (Murphy 1986).
The phenomenological influence upon
contemporary sociology can be seen in the increased humanization of
theoretical works, research methods, educational assessment procedures,
and instructional modes (Aho 1998; Darroch and Silvers 1982; O'Neill
1985; Potter 1996). Phenomenological thought has influenced the work of
postmodernist, poststructuralist, critical, and neo-functional theory (Ritzer
1996). Notions such as constructionism, situationalism and reflexivity
that are at the core of phenomenology also provide the grounds for these
recent formulations. For example, the premise of poststructuralism that
language is socially constituted denying the possibility of objective
meaning is clearly rooted in phenomenology. The procedure known as
deconstruction essentiallyreverses the reification process
highlighted in phenomenology (Dickens and Fontana 1994). The
postmodernist argument that knowledge and reality do not exist apart
from discourse is also clearly rooted in phenomenology. Postmodernism’s
emphasis on the representational world as reality constructor further
exemplifies the phenomenological bent toward reflexivity (Bourdieu
1992). On the other hand, phenomenology has been used to reverse
nihilistic excesses of postmodernism and poststructuralism (O’Neil
1994). The emphases of the critical school on the constitution of the
liberative lifeworld by the autonomous, creative agent via the
transcendence of linguistic constraint echoes a theme of
phenomenological thought (Bowring 1996). Neo-functionalism, a looser and
more inclusive version of its predecessor, finds room for a micro-social
foundation focusing on the actor as a constructive agent (Layder 1997).
Phenomenology, while remaining an
identifiable movement within the discipline of sociology, has influenced
mainstream research. Inclusion of qualitative research approaches in
conventional research generally expresses this accommodation (Bentz and
Shapiro 1998). The greater acceptance of intensive interviewing,
participant observation and focus groups reflect the willingness of
non-phenomenological sociologists to integrate subjectivist approaches
into their work. The study of constructive consciousness as a method of
research has broadened and strengthened the standing of sociology in the
community of scholars (Aho 1998).
Phenomenology has made a particular
mark in the area of educational policy on a number of levels. The flaws
of objective testing have been addressed using phenomenological tools.
The issue of construct validity, the link between observation and
measurement, has been studied ethnographically as a discursive activity
to clarify the practices employed by education researchers to establish
validity (Cherryholmes 1988). Testing of children has increasingly
respected the subjectivity of the test taker (Gilliatt and Hayward 1996:
Hwang 1996). Educators are more alert to the need for understanding the
learner’s social and cognitive processes, for taking into account the
constraining parameters of consciousness, and for encouraging
self-conscious reflection. Instructional practices that emphasize
constructivist approaches have gained great support among professionals
and have been broadly implemented to the benefit of learners (Marlowe
and Page 1997).
The future impact of phenomenology
will depend on its resonance with the needs and aspirations of the
rising generations of sociologists. The drive of some among this
emerging generation is to examine the obvious with the infinite patience
and endurance that is required to come up with penetrating insight. The
arena of discourse analysis perhaps holds the greatest promise of this
achievement and will likely elicit substantial effort. The phenomenology
of emotions also appears to entice young scholars. The reflexive
analyses of popular and mediated culture in relation to identity
formation will likely draw further interest as will the study of
virtuality, cyberspace, and computer simulcra. The study of children,
the family and education will increasingly be informed by an emphasis on
constructive consciousness. Due its lack of presumption and openness the
phenomenological movement in sociology has proven hardy during the
closing decades of the twentieth century and is well situated to
encounter the new millennium.
(SEE ALSO: Ethnomethodology;
Qualitative Methods; Postmodernism; Poststructuralism)
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