An 'unfathomable hatred of Islam': Ethno/graphing the trial for the Québec City mosque massacre [0.03%]
Fabrice Fernandez,Sophie Marois,Stéphanie Gariépy et al.
Fabrice Fernandez et al.
On the night of January 29, 2017, six Muslim worshippers were killed, and many others severely injured when a white man opened fire at a mosque in Québec City (QC, Canada). This article is based on a collective ethno/graphy of the assailan...
Dimitris Papadopoulos
Dimitris Papadopoulos
If our worlds are unimaginable, or, ironically, perhaps even unsustainable without anthropogenic chemicals, what does it mean to live and navigate the toxic regime, this historical moment where human-made substances are so entangled with ec...
Convertible, multiple and hidden: The inventive lives of women's sport and activewear 1890-1940 [0.03%]
Kat Jungnickel
Kat Jungnickel
Who gets to be 'sporty' and active in public is an enduring topic of socio-political debate. Disparities in participation continue from limited access, support and funding to ill-fitting equipment and clothing. This article focuses on the l...
An ontological turn in the sociology of personal life: Tracing facet methodology's connective ontology [0.03%]
James Rupert Fletcher
James Rupert Fletcher
The sociology of personal life (SPL) has been largely untouched by sociology's ontological turn. A few scholars have attempted to retrofit SPL and new-materialist ideas, but these limited attempts have overlooked the potential for SPL to fu...
Cultivating cultural capital and transforming cultural fields: A study with arts and disability organisations in Europe [0.03%]
Ann Leahy,Delia Ferri
Ann Leahy
This article critically discusses participation by people with disabilities in the arts, drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's concept of cultural capital. It is informed by a qualitative study with representatives of organisations working on arts a...
Peter Steggals,Ruth Graham,Steph Lawler
Peter Steggals
This article explores the relevance of intersubjective recognition and the 'recognition theoretical turn' to our understanding of nonsuicidal self-injury. While previous research has demonstrated that self-injury possesses an important soci...
Melanie Hall,Pat Sikes
Melanie Hall
Drawing on narrative interviews from a study exploring the perceptions and experiences of children and young people who have a parent with young onset dementia, this article explores the ways in which the condition impacted their life cours...
Amy Chandler,Sarah Wright
Amy Chandler
Sociological research on suicide has tended to favour functionalist approaches, and quantitative methods. This paper argues for an alternative engagement - drawing on interpretive paradigms, and inspired by 'live' methodologies, we make an ...
Daniel Edmiston
Daniel Edmiston
Mainstream poverty analysis currently renders certain people and degrees of privation more socially legible than others across high-income countries. This article examines how these hierarchies carry through to and corrupt wider social scie...
Katherine Twamley,Charlotte Faircloth,Humera Iqbal
Katherine Twamley
Drawing on qualitative longitudinal data from 38 families with children in the UK collected between May 2020 and June 2021, this article discusses the extra everyday labour which individuals experienced in going about their daily lives duri...