Abstract
This interview with Jack Katz offers an inspiring statement about how to study social life. It starts with a discussion of Katz’s three-dimensional social ontology; social life is constituted in embodied interactions in which people adjust to others and create transcendent meanings. Contrasting the ontology with anthropology’s ontological turn, we note that social ontology is about generating empirically accurate descriptions capturing the flow of social life. This leads to a critical discussion of sociology’s pre-occupation with explanans-driven theorizing. Touching upon macro–micro relationships, we consider what a phenomenology of collective emotions would look like. This brings us to emotional transformations, notably the notion of ‘falling’, an important theme in Katz’s work. The interview continues with advice of how to think beyond given categories, to consider the validity of ethnographic description and to look for the absurd. Finally, we conclude that ethnography has the potential to appeal to mass audiences.
Highlights
This interview with Jack Katz offers an inspiring statement about how to study social life
Katz advances phenomenology to open up new ways of understanding social life
Important theoretical influences on Katz’s work are Durkheim’s discovery of the moral realm as social transcendence; Goffman’s sensitivity for the dramas, large and small, that make up social life; Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenological perspective on the body; and Simmel’s dialectics and his notion of social forms
Summary
This interview with Jack Katz offers an inspiring statement about how to study social life. Katz advances phenomenology to open up new ways of understanding social life.
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