This collection of new studies in ethnomethodology addresses sociology's
classical questions by developing that strand of ethnomethodological
inquiry dealing with membership categorization. This book provides
detailed studies of members' use of membership categories across various
settings from the O.J. Simpson trial, via TV commercials and news
headlines, to school staff and referral meetings. The studies show that
category use is occasional, that culture is always internal to action;
accordingly sociology's key theoretical problems and substantive areas
are re-specified in terms of members' methods of membership
categorization. This is the first collection of original, unpublished
studies by internationally renowned practitioners of ethnomethodology of
members' uses of the descriptive resources of language to describe
persons. Co-published with The International Institute for
Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis.