Artigo



Dados vol. 27 n. 1 Rio de Janeiro 1984

Interpretando as Vidas de Pessoas Comuns: Sartre, Heidegger e Faulkner

Denzin, Norman K.

Resumo

ln this essay, the author draws interpretive lessons from William Faulkner's trilogy The Hamlet, The Town, and The Mansion, so as to forward the uses of literary and life story narratives in the study of the lives of ordinary people. Following Sartre it is assumed that this method of inquiry will reveal man as "a universal singular". From Heidegger it is argued that the interpretation of human affairs must always begin with the question of "What Kind of Human Being" is it we are studying. It must be seen that our interpretation can only be conducted from within life times and the lives of those we study. Interpretive sociology must, therefore, be grounded in the thick descriptions of the lives of ordinary people. A series of principles regarding interpretive inquiry are offered. It is concluded that the sociologist's activity "should be more than a mere record of man, it can be one of the props, the pillars to help him endure and prevail" (Faulkner).

Texto completo

Interpretando as Vidas de Pessoas Comuns: Sartre, Heidegger e Faulkner