@article{oai:bunkyo.repo.nii.ac.jp:00006825, author = {上谷, 香陽}, issue = {2}, journal = {文教大学国際学部紀要, Journal of the Faculty of International Studies Bunkyo University}, month = {2018-01-31}, note = {The purpose of this paper is to examine the idea of Dorothy Smith’s institutional ethnography (IE) through reading her article “The Standard North American Family:SNAF as an Ideological Code” (Smith 1999:157-171). In her sociological investigation, Smith re-raised the classical sociological issue about the relationship between people’s local and particular experience and extra-local and general social relations. And she suggested an alternative sociology that explores how the everyday world of people’s experience is put together by social relations that extend beyond the everyday world. The point of the “SNAF” article is to explore the operation of SNAF as‘ideological code’ within what she called‘ruling relations’. Ruling relations are internally coordinated complex of administrative, managerial, professional, and discursive organization that regulates, organizers, governs, and controls our societies. Within these relations, SNAF code operates to coordinate multiple site through textually mediated discourses. In the “SNAF” article, ideological code is regarded as a constant generator of procedures for selecting syntax categories and vocabulary in the writing of formal texts and for interpreting sentences, written or spoken, ordered by it. Smith argues that SNAF-governed texts are ubiquitous and give discursive body and substance to a version of The Family, and mask the actualities of people’s lives especially when they do not accord with SNAF. Through examining the idea of Smith’s ‘textually mediated discourses’ and‘ideological code’, this paper tries to develop the method of sociological inquiry into knowing the social from people’s actual everyday world.}, pages = {1--20}, title = {テクストに媒介された言説とイデオロギー・コード : ドロシー・スミスのinstitutional ethnography をめぐって}, volume = {28}, year = {} }