1. The 1972 Conference on “Ethnomethodology, labelling theory and deviance”, University of Edinburgh
Ruth Jamieson gifted SEDIT the tape recordings, originally held by the late Ian Taylor and produced by Bob Wilson (Law, University of Edinburgh). Our ambition is to transfer the audio to a digital format for public access and to provide transcripts of the lectures.
Ernest Gellner: "The Re-Enchantment Industry"
Thomas Luckmann: "Philosophy, Science and Everyday Life"
Percy Cohen: “Inside out”
Aaron Esterson: “Understanding Families: A Dialectical Approach”
David Sudnow: "Issues in the Ethnomethodological Investigation of Occupational Practices"
Wes Sharrock: "The Language for Defining Deviants"
Roy Turner: "Talk as Social Control"
Harvey Sacks: Untitled – but on “Selecting Identifications”
Edwin Lemert: "Changing Societal Reaction To Deviance”
Berl Kuchinsky: “Deviance and Criminality: The Case of the Voyeur in a Peeper’s Perspective
Paul Walton: “Social Reaction Perspective, Deviant Commitment and Career: A Critique”
Howard Jones: Untitled
Marshall Clinard: “Deviance, Socialization, and Social Structure: The Place of the Labelling Perspective”
Peter Sedgwick: “Arguing with Goffman”
Jack Douglas: “Social Rules and Social Order”
Norman Denzin: “Methodological Implications of Symbolic Interactionism for the Study of Deviance"
W. H. Nagel: “Critical Criminology”
2. The Convict Code
By the generous gift of Robert B. Arundale we were offered the typescript of Larry Wieder’s 1969 doctoral thesis, The Convict Code: A Study of a Moral Order as a Persuasive Activity. It was the basis for his 1974 classic ethnomethodological study of ethnography, Language and social reality: the case of telling the convict code. Unfortunately the latter is out of print but hopefully it and other classics in EM & CA from this period may be re-issued.
Download from here.

For ethnomethodology there are a number of brown paper envelopes in circulation with fading mimeos from the 1970s. One that has made it online is the Purdue Symposium (careful it's 18mb) -> . Eric has a searchable version, email him if you’d like a copy.
Ruth Jamieson gifted SEDIT the tape recordings, originally held by the late Ian Taylor and produced by Bob Wilson (Law, University of Edinburgh). Our ambition is to transfer the audio to a digital format for public access and to provide transcripts of the lectures.
Ernest Gellner: "The Re-Enchantment Industry"
Thomas Luckmann: "Philosophy, Science and Everyday Life"
Percy Cohen: “Inside out”
Aaron Esterson: “Understanding Families: A Dialectical Approach”
David Sudnow: "Issues in the Ethnomethodological Investigation of Occupational Practices"
Wes Sharrock: "The Language for Defining Deviants"
Roy Turner: "Talk as Social Control"
Harvey Sacks: Untitled – but on “Selecting Identifications”
Edwin Lemert: "Changing Societal Reaction To Deviance”
Berl Kuchinsky: “Deviance and Criminality: The Case of the Voyeur in a Peeper’s Perspective
Paul Walton: “Social Reaction Perspective, Deviant Commitment and Career: A Critique”
Howard Jones: Untitled
Marshall Clinard: “Deviance, Socialization, and Social Structure: The Place of the Labelling Perspective”
Peter Sedgwick: “Arguing with Goffman”
Jack Douglas: “Social Rules and Social Order”
Norman Denzin: “Methodological Implications of Symbolic Interactionism for the Study of Deviance"
W. H. Nagel: “Critical Criminology”
2. The Convict Code
By the generous gift of Robert B. Arundale we were offered the typescript of Larry Wieder’s 1969 doctoral thesis, The Convict Code: A Study of a Moral Order as a Persuasive Activity. It was the basis for his 1974 classic ethnomethodological study of ethnography, Language and social reality: the case of telling the convict code. Unfortunately the latter is out of print but hopefully it and other classics in EM & CA from this period may be re-issued.
Download from here.

For ethnomethodology there are a number of brown paper envelopes in circulation with fading mimeos from the 1970s. One that has made it online is the Purdue Symposium (careful it's 18mb) -> . Eric has a searchable version, email him if you’d like a copy.