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Adele E. Clarke
Researcher at University of California, San Francisco
Publications - 70
Citations - 8213
Adele E. Clarke is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grounded theory & Technoscience. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 67 publications receiving 7469 citations.
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Situational Analysis: Grounded Theory After the Postmodern Turn
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the need to regrounded theory and symbolic interactionism as a theory/Methods package, pushing and being pulled around the Postmodern Turn Grounded Theory/Symbolic Interactionism, as a Theory/Methods Package, as always already around the postmodern Turn, as Recalcitrant Against the Post Modern Turn, Reflections and anticipations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Biomedicalization: Technoscientific transformations of health, illness, and U.S. biomedicine.
TL;DR: Biomedicalization describes the increasingly complex, multisited, multidirectional processes of medicalization, both extended and reconstituted through the new social forms of highly technoscientific biomedicine.
Book
Developing Grounded Theory : The Second Generation
Janice M. Morse,Barbara J. Bowers,Kathy Charmaz,Adele E. Clarke,Juliet Corbin,Phyllis Noerager Stern +5 more
TL;DR: Morse and Morse as discussed by the authors presented a history of grounded theory, including the Straussian perspective, the Glaserian perspective, and the Constructive Grounded Theory (GCT).
Journal ArticleDOI
Situational Analyses: Grounded Theory Mapping After the Postmodern Turn
TL;DR: Based on Strauss's ecological frameworks in his social worlds and arenas theory, the authors offer situational maps and analyses as innovative supplements to the basic social process analyses characteristic of traditional grounded theory. But these maps do not address differences and complexities of social life articulated through the postmodern turn.
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Anticipation: Technoscience, life, affect, temporality
TL;DR: Anticipation is the palpable sense that things could be (all) right if we leverage new spaces of opportunity, reconfiguring "the possible" as discussed by the authors, a virtue emerging through actuarial saturation as sciences of the actual are displaced by speculative forecast.