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Dieses mit IHMC CmapTools erstellte CMap hat Informationen bezüglich: SituationalAnalysis, Actor-network theory (Latour) Is a competing analytic framework to (Clarke, 1991) Social Worlds/Arenas/ Discourses (Strauss), Symbolic Interactionism (Blumer) Comes from the philosophy of Pragmatism (Mead), Discourse studies (Foucault) Could extend SI by adding elements of postructuralism and postmodern theory (Denzin, 1992, cited by Clarke, 2009, p. 200) Symbolic Interactionism (Blumer), Situational Analysis (Clarke) Shares fundametal assumptions of (Clarke, 2009, p. 197), but is distinctively materialist (Clarke, 2009, p. 203) Constructionist grounded theory (Charmaz), "The crisis of representation" how to include "silenced" voices or "implicated agents" Human elements as agents (explicit or implicated), Situational Analysis (Clarke) Reasserts importance and implication of Symbolic Interactionism (Blumer), Constructionist grounded theory (Charmaz) Opposes assumptions and objectives of (Charmaz, 2009) Objectivist grounded theory, Nonhuman elements as actants (explicit or implicated) In agreement with (Clarke, 2009) Actor-network theory (Latour), Situational Analysis (Clarke) Moves beyond the "knowing subject" to also analyze the discourses that constitute and through which actors/actants constitute themselves by drawing from (Clarke, 2009) Discourse studies (Foucault), Situational Analysis (Clarke) takes into account Human elements as agents (explicit or implicated), Discourse studies (Foucault) Fundamental for (among other work) Postmodernism, The social ecology / situation Through the theory of (Clarke, 2009, p. 199) Social Worlds/Arenas/ Discourses (Strauss), Actor-network theory (Latour) Extends basic SI principles by emphasizing importance of non-human elements (Clarke & Star, 2003) Symbolic Interactionism (Blumer), Social Worlds/Arenas/ Discourses (Strauss) Is part of the Chicago school of (Clarke, 2005, 2009) Symbolic Interactionism (Blumer), Sociology of Knowledge associated with Postmodernism, Situated knowledges (e.g. Haraway) Focuses on situated (historically and geographically locable) knowledge production and consumption by particular groups Sociology of Knowledge, Situational Analysis (Clarke) refers to Situated knowledges (e.g. Haraway), Situational Analysis (Clarke) Uses as the fundamental unit of analysis (Clarke, 2009, p. 210) The social ecology / situation, Situational Analysis (Clarke) Extends GT by "pushing it around the postmodern turn" by using a root metaphor of social worlds / arenas / negotiations / discourse (instead of the social process / action metaphor) (Clarke, 2005, 2009) Grounded theory, Situational Analysis (Clarke) Explicitly takes into account Nonhuman elements as actants (explicit or implicated)