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Dorothy E. Smith

Dorothy Edith Smith CM (née Place; 6 July 1926 – 3 June 2022) was a British-born Canadian ethnographer, feminist studies scholar, sociologist, and writer with research interests in a variety of disciplines. These include women's studies, feminist theory, psychology, and educational studies. Smith was also involved in certain subfields of sociology, such as the sociology of knowledge, family studies, and methodology. She founded the sociological sub-disciplines of feminist standpoint theory and institutional ethnography.

Dorothy E. Smith

Born
Dorothy Edith Place

(1926-07-06)6 July 1926
Died3 June 2022(2022-06-03) (aged 95)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley
London School of Economics
Academic work
Main interestsFeminist studies, sociology, educational studies, social anthropology, psychology, ethnography
Notable works
  • Institutional Ethnography: A Sociology for People
  • The Conceptual Practices of Power: A Feminist Sociology of Knowledge
  • The Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology
Notable ideasInstitutional ethnography, ruling relations, feminist standpoint theory, bifurcation of consciousness

Biography Edit

Smith was born on 6 July 1926[1] in Northallerton, North Riding of Yorkshire, England,[2][3] to Dorothy F. Place and Tom Place, who had her and three sons. Her mother was a university-trained chemist who had been engaged in the women's suffrage movement as a young woman, and her father was a timber merchant.[4][5] One of her brothers, Ullin Place, was known for his work on consciousness as a process of the brain, and another was poet Milner Place.[6]

At the age of twenty-five, Smith entered the work force as a secretary in the book publishing industry, but this left her wanting more.[7] After this realization, Smith completed her undergraduate degree at the London School of Economics, earning her B.Sc. in sociology with a major in social anthropology in 1955. She then married William Reid Smith, whom she had met while attending LSE, and they moved to the United States.[8] They both attended graduate school at the University of California, Berkeley, where she received her Ph.D. in sociology in 1963, nine months after the birth of their second child. Not long afterward she and her husband were divorced; she retained custody of the children. She then taught as a lecturer at UC Berkeley from 1964 to 1966.[9] Smith started teaching sociology, and was the only female teacher in a faculty of 44.[10]

Following the divorce, Smith was lacking in day care and family support while trying to raise her two children alone. As a result, she decided to move back to England in the late 60s.[11] While she was there, she gave lectures on sociology at the University of Essex, Colchester.[11] In 1968, Smith moved with her two sons to Vancouver, British Columbia to teach at the University of British Columbia, where she helped to establish a Women's Studies Program.[11] In 1977 Smith moved to Toronto, Ontario to work at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, where she lived until she retired.[11] In 1994 she became an adjunct professor at the University of Victoria, where she continued her work in institutional ethnography.[11] Smith served on the international advisory board for the feminist journal Signs.[12]

Smith died of complications due to a fall at her home in Vancouver on 3 June 2022, at the age of 95.[5][13]

Familial Influences Edit

Dorothy Smith came from a long line of feminist activists.[14] Each of these familial figures had an impact on Smith’s sociological theories and ideas.[14] Most notably were Margaret Fox, Lucy Ellison Abraham, and Dorothy Foster Place.[14]

Margaret Fox née Fell was the feminist leader of the 17th century Quaker movement.[14] Often referred to as the “mother of Quakerism” she opened her home to be used as one of the first headquarters for the Quaker religious Society of Friends.[14] Lucy Ellison Abraham and Dorothy Foster Place were Dorothy Smith’s grandmother and mother respectively.[14] Both were members of the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) and engaged in militant suffrage activism.[14] Abraham participated mostly in the organizational and office work, while Place was more active, even getting arrested once during a window breaking campaign.[14]

Smith’s own identity as a Marxist-feminist developed during the 1970s, when her life history and the on going women’s movement merged to contribute to her life and sociological practices.[14] The Vancouver Women’s Movement from 1968 to 1977 proved to be a key moment in the development of Smith’s identity.[14] The combination of Smith’s feminist ancestry and her own experiences in women’s movements went on to shape her standpoint theory.[14] Through watching and learning about her familial history and how each of the three women previously mentioned addressed feminism and the inequality of women through their roles as women Smith transformed these actions into a theory.[14] Smith’s standpoint theory argues that the origin of standpoint came from women’s experiences as housewives.[14] Each of her three ancestors were housewives and that added to and shaped their approach to feminism and activism.

Standpoint theory Edit

Before Smith, American feminist theorist Sandra Harding conducted the 1986 study, The Science Question in Feminism, which created the concept of standpoint theory in order to emphasize the knowledge of women, arguing that hierarchies naturally created ignorance about social reality and critical questions among those whom the hierarchies favored.[15] However, those at the bottom of these ladders had a perspective that made it easier to explain social problems.[16]

Standpoint theory is rooted in the idea that what one knows is impacted by their position in society.[11] It also contains three main beliefs: no one can have complete and objective knowledge, no two people can have exactly the same standpoint, and we must not take for granted our own standpoint.[11] Smith emphasized the importance of recognizing our standpoint and utilizing it as the entry point to our investigation.[11] Her overall goal with standpoint theory was to fully account for the perspectives of different genders and their effects on our reality.[11]

During her time as a graduate student in the 1960s, Smith developed her notion of standpoint, shaping Harding's theory. During this time, Smith recognized that she was experiencing "two subjectivities, home and university",[17] and that these two worlds could not be blended. In recognition of her own standpoint, Smith shed light on the fact that sociology was lacking in the acknowledgment of standpoint. At this point, the methods and theories of sociology had been formed upon and built in a male-dominated social world, unintentionally ignoring the women's world of sexual reproduction, children, and household affairs.[17] Women's duties are seen as natural parts of society, rather than as an addition to culture. Smith believed that asking questions from a woman's perspective could provide insight into social institutions.[18] Smith determined that for minority groups, the constant separation between the world as they experience it versus continually having to adapt to the view of the dominant group creates oppression, which can lead to members of the marginalized group feeling alienated from their "true" selves.[17] Smith compared the women's experience to the women's standpoint, and believed that women's oppression was grounded in male control. The idea that women shared a method in their experiences with oppression was enforced by Smith.[19]

Example Edit

Smith often used one particular story as an example of the importance of standpoint theory, and as a way of explaining it:

One day, while riding in a train in Ontario, Smith observed a family of Indians standing together by a river, watching the train pass by. It was only after having made these initial assumptions that Smith realized that they were just that; they were assumptions, assumptions that she had no way of knowing if they were true or not. She called them "Indians", but she couldn't have known, for sure, what their origins were. She called them a family, which could have very well not been true. She also said they were watching the train go by, an assumption that emerged solely based on her position in time and space, her position riding in the train, looking out at the "family".[20]

For Smith, this served as a representation of her own privilege, through which she made assumptions and immediately imposed them on the group of "Indians". It helped lead her to the conclusion that experiences differ, across space, time, and circumstance. It is unfair to create society—and ruling relations—based on only one point of view/being.[21]

Connection to Marxism Edit

Smith took on a similar mindset as Karl Marx, founder of Marxism. She took a similar approach of Marxism and applied it to feminism. One of the paper’s written by Smith, draws upon Marx’s ideologies. In the paper, “The Ideological Practice of Sociology”, Smith explains the distinction between ideology and social science, taking upon some of Marx’s ideas. Furthermore, Smith gave a talk relating to “feminism and Marxism”. In the talk, she spoke about how her feminist distinctiveness developed through Marxism. [22]The idea that not all standpoints are viewed equally shows how Smith’s take on standpoint theory also draws direct connections with Marxism.[11] This inequality in standpoints and how they are perceived in society reflects Marxist ideas of the impact of social, economic, and political relations on shaping and determining oppression.[11]

Institutional ethnography Edit

Institutional ethnography (IE) is a sociological method of inquiry which Smith developed, created to explore the social relations that structure people's everyday lives. For the institutional ethnographer, ordinary daily activity becomes the site for an investigation of social organization. Smith developed IE as Marxist feminist sociology[23] "for women, for people";[24] it is now used by researchers in the social sciences, in education, in human services and in policy research as a method for mapping the translocal relations that coordinate people's activities within institutions.[25][26] Smith insisted that her outline of Institutional ethnography would be expanded upon in a collaborative manner amongst sociologists, emphasizing the networking needed to progress the idea.[27]

Smith uses the example of the everyday act of walking her dog to show how a benign act can actually be used for sociological investigation.[11] She claims that in walking her dog and allowing it to do its business on some lawns, but not others actually reaffirms the class system.[11] In choosing which lawns are acceptable or not for her dog she is reaffirming the differences in forms of property ownership.[11]

In her work on sociology for women, Smith spent time attempting to show that the standpoint of women has been historically excluded from aspects of life related to professional ruling.[28] Meaning managing, organizing, and administering.[28] Here Smith highlights how important it is to investigate how the everyday worlds we live in are shaped by the institutions we are surrounded.[28] In this case Smith defines institutions as complex, functional organizations, in which many forms and groups are interwoven.[28] Institutional processes then particular actions into standardized and generalized forms.[28]  Smith draws on Marx’s discussion of commodity relations: when goods and services are exchanged in the market setting, their value appears in the form of money.[28] In a similar way, bureaucratic forms of organization make actions accountable in terms of abstract and generalized categories.[28]

Lecture video Edit

Smith gave a recorded lecture introducing her work and thoughts on institutional ethnography. This lecture was hosted at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health on November 5, 2018.[29]

Ruling relations Edit

Smith also developed the concept of ruling relations, the institutional complexes that "coordinate the everyday work of administration and the lives of those subject to administrative regimes".[30] This allows a society to have control and organization, with examples being systems of bureaucracy and management.[31] It also defines how they will interact with one another. Smith argues that ruling relations dehumanize people. She focuses on how it can limit women to only being seen in their traditional roles of mother, wife, homemaker, or housekeeper.[32]

Bifurcation of consciousness Edit

Bifurcation is defined as dividing or separating into two parts or branches.[33] Smith argued that there is a split between the world that an individual actually experiences and the dominant view that one is supposed to adapt, in this case being the male-dominated view.[34] In the case of the bifurcation of consciousness, specifically related to standpoint theory, this refers to the separation of the two modes of being for women. Since sociology is a male-dominated field, women must fight to push past their expected roles as housewives and mothers, moving from the local realm of the home to the "extra local" realm of society.[35] Women, therefore, split their consciousness in two in order to establish themselves as knowledgeable and competent beings within society and the field of sociology.[36]

Influences Edit

Smith had influential ties to theorists such as Karl Marx and Alfred Schütz.[17] Building on top of Marxist theory, Smith evolved alienation into gender-stratified capitalism, explaining in her work Feminism and Marxism how "objective social, economic and political relations ... shape and determine women's oppression".[37] From Schutz, Smith explains, "Individuals are experienced as 'types'",[17] developing upon his concept of umwelt and mitwelt relations. In The Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology, Smith explains mitwelt and umwelt relations of male dominance claiming, "women's work conceals from men the actual concrete forms on which their work depends".[38] Smith was also influenced by George Herbert Mead after taking one of his classes, as well as Maurice Merleau-Ponty, after stumbling upon one of his books.[7]

Umwelt and mitwelt Edit

Umwelt can be described as the world around us. It is on a more intimate level like such as a husband and wife. Mitwelt is the with-world for instance Mitwelt relations refer more to a type of relation, such as an individual and their mail carrier.[39] Alfred Schütz describes mitwelt relationships as less intimate than umwelt relationships. Smith extends these concepts by demonstrating how umwelt is more "central in women's lives, and men relegate their umwelt relations to women".[17] Meaning, women tend to have more intimate relationships that men.

Professional recognition/awards Edit

While Smith's early essays were influential in the emergence of sex and gender education in sociology, her work is neglected by other sociologists.[40] However, in recognition of her contributions in the "transformation of sociology", and for extending the boundaries of "feminist standpoint theory" to "include race, class, and gender". Smith received numerous awards from the American Sociological Association, including the American Sociological Association's Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award (1999)[41] and the Jessie Bernard Award for Feminist Sociology (1993).[42][43] In recognition of her scholarship, she also received two awards from the Canadian Sociological Association and the Canadian Anthropological Association; the Outstanding Contribution Award (1990)[44] and the John Porter Award for her book The Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology (1990).[45] In 2019 she was named as a member of the Order of Canada.[46][47]

Her work is ranked among the most important produced in 20th and 21st Century sociology,[48] and it has been suggested that Institutional Ethnography should be considered a contemporary classic.[49]

The Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology (1987) Edit

Smith wrote Everyday World as a Problematic: A Feminist Sociology. The book is a series of six essays that touch upon her ideas of social life, feminist theory, Marxism, and phenomenology. [50]Her concept of the line of fault is the notion of recognizing the male biases as a society and being conscious from a woman's perspective and noticing the inequality between male and female.[51] In Toronto, while teaching at Ontario Institute of Studies, Smith published her paper about everyday lives as a woman, and the sociology behind the everyday housewife and mother.[52] Her work intended to create a sociology for women, as this is a male dominated field. Smith wanted to create a field of sociology that questioned the everyday problems of life.[53]

Selected works Edit

  • Simply Institutional Ethnography: Creating a Sociology for People (2022, ISBN 978-1487528065)
  • Institutional Ethnography: A Sociology for People (2005, ISBN 978-0759105010)
  • Mothering for Schooling, co-author with Alison Griffith (2004, ISBN 978-0415950534)
  • Writing the Social: Critique, Theory, and Investigations (1999, ISBN 978-0802043078)
  • The Conceptual Practices of Power: A Feminist Sociology of Knowledge (1990, ISBN 978-1555530808)
  • Texts, Facts, and Femininity: Exploring the Relations of Ruling (1990, ISBN 978-0415102445)
  • The Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology (1987, ISBN 978-1555530365)
  • Feminism and Marxism: A Place to Begin, A Way to Go (1977, ISBN 978-0919888715)
  • Women Look at Psychiatry: I'm Not Mad, I'm Angry—Collection edited by Smith and David (1975, ISBN 978-0889740006), Press Gang Publishing
  • Sociological Theory Vol.10 No.1: Sociology from Women's Experience: A Reaffirmation (1992)[54]
  • What It Might Mean to Do a Canadian Sociology: The Everyday World as Problematic (1975)[55]

References Edit

  1. ^ Dorothy Edith Smith: History & Feminist theory
  2. ^ Smyth, Deirdre Mary (1999). A Few Laced Genes: Sociology, the Women's Movement and the Work of Dorothy E. Smith (PDF) (Doctor of Philosophy thesis). University of Toronto. p. 43.
  3. ^ Allan, Kenneth (2011). Contemporary social and sociological theory : visualizing social worlds (2nd ed.). Los Angeles: SAGE. p. 385. ISBN 9781412978200. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  4. ^ "Papers of Dorothy Foster Place". Archives Hub. Retrieved 17 June 2022.
  5. ^ a b Risen, Clay (16 June 2022). "Dorothy E. Smith, Groundbreaker in Feminist Sociology, Dies at 95". The New York Times. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  6. ^ Graham, George; Valentine, Elizabeth R. (2004). Identifying the mind : selected papers of U.T. Place. New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-0195161373. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  7. ^ a b Smith, Dorothy. "Dorothy E. Smith". Université du Québec à Chicoutimi. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  8. ^ Smith, Dorothy (2 February 2005). "Dorothy E. Smith". UQAC. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  9. ^ Wallace, R. & Wolf, A., "Contemporary Sociological Theory" 6th Edition (2006), Pearson Prentice-Hall. p. 297-298
  10. ^ "Dorothy Smith: History & Feminist theory". SchoolWorkHelper. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Appelrouth, S; Edles, L.D (2020). Classical and contemporary sociological theory: Text and readings. Sage Publications. pp. 560–566.
  12. ^ "Masthead". Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 22 August 2012. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  13. ^ "Dorothy E. Smith". Kudoboard. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Smythe, Deirdre (April 2009). "A few laced genes: women's standpoint in the feminist ancestry of Dorothy E. Smith". History of the Human Sciences. 22 (2): 22–57. doi:10.1177/0952695108101285. ISSN 0952-6951. PMID 19999830. S2CID 27464035.
  15. ^ Smith, Dorothy E (1992). ""Sociology from Women's Experience: A Reaffirmation."". Sociological Theory. 10 (1): 88–98. doi:10.2307/202020. JSTOR 202020.
  16. ^ Borland, Elizabeth. "Standpoint theory". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Appelrouth, Scott; Edles, Laura Delfor (2008). Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory: Readings and Text (First ed.). Pine Forge Press. ISBN 978-0761927938.
  18. ^ Borland, Elizabeth. "Standpoint Theory". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  19. ^ Smith, Dorothy E (1992). "Sociology from Women's Experience: A Reaffirmation". Sociological Theory. 10 (1): 88–98. doi:10.2307/202020. JSTOR 202020. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  20. ^ Smith, D. E. (1990). The conceptual practices of power: A feminist sociology of knowledge. Boston: Northeastern University Press.
  21. ^ Lemert, C. C. (2004). Social theory: The multicultural and classic readings (4th ed.). Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
  22. ^ Campbell, Marie (2003) "Dorothy Smith and Knowing the World We Live In," The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare: Vol. 30: Iss. 1, Article 2.
  23. ^ Carpenter, Sara; Mojab, Shahrzad. "Institutional ethnography: pursuing a Marxist-feminist analysis of consciousness" (PDF). Paper presented at the 38th Annual SCUTREA Conference, 2–4 July 2008 University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  24. ^ Smith, Dorothy E. (2012). The everyday world as problematic a feminist sociology. Boston: Northeastern University Press. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-55553-794-4.
  25. ^ Trenerry, Ruth (2011). "A Portfolio of Research Career-work: An Institutional Ethnography exploring women's 'career' activity in the paid workplace". School of Education Division of Education, Arts and Social Sciences University of South Australia. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  26. ^ Walby, Kevin (29 June 2016). "On the Social Relations of Research". Qualitative Inquiry. 13 (7): 1008–1030. doi:10.1177/1077800407305809. S2CID 143598915.
  27. ^ Devault, Marjorie L. (2006). "Introduction: What is Institutional Ethnography?". Social Problems. 53 (3): 294–298. doi:10.1525/sp.2006.53.3.294. JSTOR 10.1525/sp.2006.53.3.294.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g Grahame, Peter R. (October 1998). "Ethnography, Institutions, and the Problematic of the Everyday World". Human Studies. 21 (4): 347–360. doi:10.1023/A:1005469127008. ISSN 0163-8548. S2CID 144243329.
  29. ^ An introduction to Institutional Ethnography and the work of Dorothy E. Smith, retrieved 5 October 2022
  30. ^ DeVault, Marjorie. "Ruling Relations". Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology.
  31. ^ Hicks, Stephen (31 December 2009). "Sexuality and the 'Relations of Ruling': Using Institutional Ethnography to Research Lesbian and Gay Foster Care and Adoption". Social Work & Society. 7 (2): 234–245. ISSN 1613-8953. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  32. ^ DeVault, Marjorie L. (15 February 2007), "Ruling Relations", in Ritzer, George (ed.), The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology, Oxford, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pp. wbeosr082, doi:10.1002/9781405165518.wbeosr082, ISBN 978-1-4051-2433-1, retrieved 4 October 2022
  33. ^ "Bifurcation". Wordnik.com. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  34. ^ Appelrouth, S; Edles, L.D (2020). "Feminist and Gender Theories". Classical and contemporary sociological theory: Text and readings (PDF). SAGE Publications. pp. 312–380.
  35. ^ Mann, D. (2008). Understanding society: A survey of modern social theory. Don Mills, Ont.: Oxford University Press.
  36. ^ Bowell, T. "Feminist Standpoint Theory". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  37. ^ Smith, Dorothy (1997). Feminism and Marxism: A Place to Begin, A Way to Go. Vancouver: New Star Books.
  38. ^ Smith, Dorothy (1987). The Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology. Northeastern University Press.
  39. ^ Department, The American Women's College Psychology; McGrath, Michelle. "Chapter 25, Part 6: Existential Psychotherapy". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  40. ^ Laslett, Barbara; Thorne, Barrie (1992). "Considering Dorothy Smith's Social Theory: Introduction". Sociological Theory. 10 (1): 60–62. doi:10.2307/202016. JSTOR 202016.
  41. ^ "Dorothy E. Smith Award Statement". American Sociological Association. 9 June 2009. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  42. ^ Scott, John (2007). Fifty key sociologists : the contemporary theorists (1st ed.). London: Routledge. pp. 203–204. ISBN 978-0415352567. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  43. ^ "Jessie Bernard Award". American Sociological Association. 29 May 2009. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  44. ^ "Outstanding Contribution Award / Prix De Contribution Remarquable". Canadian Sociological Association. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  45. ^ "The John Porter Award / Le Prix du livre de John Porter". Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
  46. ^ "Governor General Announces 83 New Appointments to the Order of Canada". Rideau Hall Press Office. 27 June 2019. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  47. ^ Lapierre, Matthew (27 June 2019). "2019 Order of Canada appointees have made their mark on all aspects of Canadian society". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 20 July 2020.
  48. ^ Zake, Ieva; DeCesare, Michael (2011). New directions in sociology : essays on theory and methodology in the 21st century. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. pp. 50, 64–65. ISBN 9780786463428. Retrieved 1 January 2018.
  49. ^ Hart, RJ. & McKinnon, A. (2010). 'Sociological Epistemology: Durkheim's Paradox and Dorothy E. Smith’s Actuality'. Sociology, vol 44, no. 6, pp. 1038-1054.[1]
  50. ^ "Google Books".
  51. ^ Smith, Dorothy E. (1 January 1987). The Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-6702-9.
  52. ^ "Dorothy Smith: History & Feminist theory". SchoolWorkHelper. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  53. ^ Collins, Patricia Hill (1992). "Transforming the Inner Circle: Dorothy Smith's Challenge to Sociological Theory". Sociological Theory. 10 (1): 73–80. doi:10.2307/202018. JSTOR 202018. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  54. ^ Smith, Dorothy E. (1992). "Sociology from Women's Experience: A Reaffirmation". Sociological Theory. 10 (1): 88–98. doi:10.2307/202020. JSTOR 202020.
  55. ^ Smith, Dorothy E. (1975). "What It Might Mean to Do a Canadian Sociology: The Everyday World as Problematic". The Canadian Journal of Sociology. 1 (3): 363–376. doi:10.2307/3340418. ISSN 0318-6431. JSTOR 3340418.

dorothy, smith, other, people, named, dorothy, smith, dorothy, smith, disambiguation, dorothy, edith, smith, née, place, july, 1926, june, 2022, british, born, canadian, ethnographer, feminist, studies, scholar, sociologist, writer, with, research, interests, . For other people named Dorothy Smith see Dorothy Smith disambiguation Dorothy Edith Smith CM nee Place 6 July 1926 3 June 2022 was a British born Canadian ethnographer feminist studies scholar sociologist and writer with research interests in a variety of disciplines These include women s studies feminist theory psychology and educational studies Smith was also involved in certain subfields of sociology such as the sociology of knowledge family studies and methodology She founded the sociological sub disciplines of feminist standpoint theory and institutional ethnography Dorothy E SmithCMBornDorothy Edith Place 1926 07 06 6 July 1926Northallerton North Riding of Yorkshire EnglandDied3 June 2022 2022 06 03 aged 95 Vancouver British Columbia CanadaAcademic backgroundAlma materUniversity of California BerkeleyLondon School of EconomicsAcademic workMain interestsFeminist studies sociology educational studies social anthropology psychology ethnographyNotable worksInstitutional Ethnography A Sociology for People The Conceptual Practices of Power A Feminist Sociology of Knowledge The Everyday World as Problematic A Feminist SociologyNotable ideasInstitutional ethnography ruling relations feminist standpoint theory bifurcation of consciousness Contents 1 Biography 2 Familial Influences 3 Standpoint theory 3 1 Example 4 Connection to Marxism 5 Institutional ethnography 5 1 Lecture video 6 Ruling relations 7 Bifurcation of consciousness 8 Influences 9 Umwelt and mitwelt 10 Professional recognition awards 11 The Everyday World as Problematic A Feminist Sociology 1987 12 Selected works 13 ReferencesBiography EditSmith was born on 6 July 1926 1 in Northallerton North Riding of Yorkshire England 2 3 to Dorothy F Place and Tom Place who had her and three sons Her mother was a university trained chemist who had been engaged in the women s suffrage movement as a young woman and her father was a timber merchant 4 5 One of her brothers Ullin Place was known for his work on consciousness as a process of the brain and another was poet Milner Place 6 At the age of twenty five Smith entered the work force as a secretary in the book publishing industry but this left her wanting more 7 After this realization Smith completed her undergraduate degree at the London School of Economics earning her B Sc in sociology with a major in social anthropology in 1955 She then married William Reid Smith whom she had met while attending LSE and they moved to the United States 8 They both attended graduate school at the University of California Berkeley where she received her Ph D in sociology in 1963 nine months after the birth of their second child Not long afterward she and her husband were divorced she retained custody of the children She then taught as a lecturer at UC Berkeley from 1964 to 1966 9 Smith started teaching sociology and was the only female teacher in a faculty of 44 10 Following the divorce Smith was lacking in day care and family support while trying to raise her two children alone As a result she decided to move back to England in the late 60s 11 While she was there she gave lectures on sociology at the University of Essex Colchester 11 In 1968 Smith moved with her two sons to Vancouver British Columbia to teach at the University of British Columbia where she helped to establish a Women s Studies Program 11 In 1977 Smith moved to Toronto Ontario to work at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education where she lived until she retired 11 In 1994 she became an adjunct professor at the University of Victoria where she continued her work in institutional ethnography 11 Smith served on the international advisory board for the feminist journal Signs 12 Smith died of complications due to a fall at her home in Vancouver on 3 June 2022 at the age of 95 5 13 Familial Influences EditDorothy Smith came from a long line of feminist activists 14 Each of these familial figures had an impact on Smith s sociological theories and ideas 14 Most notably were Margaret Fox Lucy Ellison Abraham and Dorothy Foster Place 14 Margaret Fox nee Fell was the feminist leader of the 17th century Quaker movement 14 Often referred to as the mother of Quakerism she opened her home to be used as one of the first headquarters for the Quaker religious Society of Friends 14 Lucy Ellison Abraham and Dorothy Foster Place were Dorothy Smith s grandmother and mother respectively 14 Both were members of the Women s Social and Political Union WSPU and engaged in militant suffrage activism 14 Abraham participated mostly in the organizational and office work while Place was more active even getting arrested once during a window breaking campaign 14 Smith s own identity as a Marxist feminist developed during the 1970s when her life history and the on going women s movement merged to contribute to her life and sociological practices 14 The Vancouver Women s Movement from 1968 to 1977 proved to be a key moment in the development of Smith s identity 14 The combination of Smith s feminist ancestry and her own experiences in women s movements went on to shape her standpoint theory 14 Through watching and learning about her familial history and how each of the three women previously mentioned addressed feminism and the inequality of women through their roles as women Smith transformed these actions into a theory 14 Smith s standpoint theory argues that the origin of standpoint came from women s experiences as housewives 14 Each of her three ancestors were housewives and that added to and shaped their approach to feminism and activism Standpoint theory EditBefore Smith American feminist theorist Sandra Harding conducted the 1986 study The Science Question in Feminism which created the concept of standpoint theory in order to emphasize the knowledge of women arguing that hierarchies naturally created ignorance about social reality and critical questions among those whom the hierarchies favored 15 However those at the bottom of these ladders had a perspective that made it easier to explain social problems 16 Standpoint theory is rooted in the idea that what one knows is impacted by their position in society 11 It also contains three main beliefs no one can have complete and objective knowledge no two people can have exactly the same standpoint and we must not take for granted our own standpoint 11 Smith emphasized the importance of recognizing our standpoint and utilizing it as the entry point to our investigation 11 Her overall goal with standpoint theory was to fully account for the perspectives of different genders and their effects on our reality 11 During her time as a graduate student in the 1960s Smith developed her notion of standpoint shaping Harding s theory During this time Smith recognized that she was experiencing two subjectivities home and university 17 and that these two worlds could not be blended In recognition of her own standpoint Smith shed light on the fact that sociology was lacking in the acknowledgment of standpoint At this point the methods and theories of sociology had been formed upon and built in a male dominated social world unintentionally ignoring the women s world of sexual reproduction children and household affairs 17 Women s duties are seen as natural parts of society rather than as an addition to culture Smith believed that asking questions from a woman s perspective could provide insight into social institutions 18 Smith determined that for minority groups the constant separation between the world as they experience it versus continually having to adapt to the view of the dominant group creates oppression which can lead to members of the marginalized group feeling alienated from their true selves 17 Smith compared the women s experience to the women s standpoint and believed that women s oppression was grounded in male control The idea that women shared a method in their experiences with oppression was enforced by Smith 19 Example Edit Smith often used one particular story as an example of the importance of standpoint theory and as a way of explaining it One day while riding in a train in Ontario Smith observed a family of Indians standing together by a river watching the train pass by It was only after having made these initial assumptions that Smith realized that they were just that they were assumptions assumptions that she had no way of knowing if they were true or not She called them Indians but she couldn t have known for sure what their origins were She called them a family which could have very well not been true She also said they were watching the train go by an assumption that emerged solely based on her position in time and space her position riding in the train looking out at the family 20 For Smith this served as a representation of her own privilege through which she made assumptions and immediately imposed them on the group of Indians It helped lead her to the conclusion that experiences differ across space time and circumstance It is unfair to create society and ruling relations based on only one point of view being 21 Connection to Marxism EditSmith took on a similar mindset as Karl Marx founder of Marxism She took a similar approach of Marxism and applied it to feminism One of the paper s written by Smith draws upon Marx s ideologies In the paper The Ideological Practice of Sociology Smith explains the distinction between ideology and social science taking upon some of Marx s ideas Furthermore Smith gave a talk relating to feminism and Marxism In the talk she spoke about how her feminist distinctiveness developed through Marxism 22 The idea that not all standpoints are viewed equally shows how Smith s take on standpoint theory also draws direct connections with Marxism 11 This inequality in standpoints and how they are perceived in society reflects Marxist ideas of the impact of social economic and political relations on shaping and determining oppression 11 Institutional ethnography EditMain article Institutional ethnography Institutional ethnography IE is a sociological method of inquiry which Smith developed created to explore the social relations that structure people s everyday lives For the institutional ethnographer ordinary daily activity becomes the site for an investigation of social organization Smith developed IE as Marxist feminist sociology 23 for women for people 24 it is now used by researchers in the social sciences in education in human services and in policy research as a method for mapping the translocal relations that coordinate people s activities within institutions 25 26 Smith insisted that her outline of Institutional ethnography would be expanded upon in a collaborative manner amongst sociologists emphasizing the networking needed to progress the idea 27 Smith uses the example of the everyday act of walking her dog to show how a benign act can actually be used for sociological investigation 11 She claims that in walking her dog and allowing it to do its business on some lawns but not others actually reaffirms the class system 11 In choosing which lawns are acceptable or not for her dog she is reaffirming the differences in forms of property ownership 11 In her work on sociology for women Smith spent time attempting to show that the standpoint of women has been historically excluded from aspects of life related to professional ruling 28 Meaning managing organizing and administering 28 Here Smith highlights how important it is to investigate how the everyday worlds we live in are shaped by the institutions we are surrounded 28 In this case Smith defines institutions as complex functional organizations in which many forms and groups are interwoven 28 Institutional processes then particular actions into standardized and generalized forms 28 Smith draws on Marx s discussion of commodity relations when goods and services are exchanged in the market setting their value appears in the form of money 28 In a similar way bureaucratic forms of organization make actions accountable in terms of abstract and generalized categories 28 Lecture video Edit Smith gave a recorded lecture introducing her work and thoughts on institutional ethnography This lecture was hosted at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health on November 5 2018 29 Ruling relations EditSmith also developed the concept of ruling relations the institutional complexes that coordinate the everyday work of administration and the lives of those subject to administrative regimes 30 This allows a society to have control and organization with examples being systems of bureaucracy and management 31 It also defines how they will interact with one another Smith argues that ruling relations dehumanize people She focuses on how it can limit women to only being seen in their traditional roles of mother wife homemaker or housekeeper 32 Bifurcation of consciousness EditBifurcation is defined as dividing or separating into two parts or branches 33 Smith argued that there is a split between the world that an individual actually experiences and the dominant view that one is supposed to adapt in this case being the male dominated view 34 In the case of the bifurcation of consciousness specifically related to standpoint theory this refers to the separation of the two modes of being for women Since sociology is a male dominated field women must fight to push past their expected roles as housewives and mothers moving from the local realm of the home to the extra local realm of society 35 Women therefore split their consciousness in two in order to establish themselves as knowledgeable and competent beings within society and the field of sociology 36 Influences EditSmith had influential ties to theorists such as Karl Marx and Alfred Schutz 17 Building on top of Marxist theory Smith evolved alienation into gender stratified capitalism explaining in her work Feminism and Marxism how objective social economic and political relations shape and determine women s oppression 37 From Schutz Smith explains Individuals are experienced as types 17 developing upon his concept of umwelt and mitwelt relations In The Everyday World as Problematic A Feminist Sociology Smith explains mitwelt and umwelt relations of male dominance claiming women s work conceals from men the actual concrete forms on which their work depends 38 Smith was also influenced by George Herbert Mead after taking one of his classes as well as Maurice Merleau Ponty after stumbling upon one of his books 7 Umwelt and mitwelt EditUmwelt can be described as the world around us It is on a more intimate level like such as a husband and wife Mitwelt is the with world for instance Mitwelt relations refer more to a type of relation such as an individual and their mail carrier 39 Alfred Schutz describes mitwelt relationships as less intimate than umwelt relationships Smith extends these concepts by demonstrating how umwelt is more central in women s lives and men relegate their umwelt relations to women 17 Meaning women tend to have more intimate relationships that men Professional recognition awards EditWhile Smith s early essays were influential in the emergence of sex and gender education in sociology her work is neglected by other sociologists 40 However in recognition of her contributions in the transformation of sociology and for extending the boundaries of feminist standpoint theory to include race class and gender Smith received numerous awards from the American Sociological Association including the American Sociological Association s Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award 1999 41 and the Jessie Bernard Award for Feminist Sociology 1993 42 43 In recognition of her scholarship she also received two awards from the Canadian Sociological Association and the Canadian Anthropological Association the Outstanding Contribution Award 1990 44 and the John Porter Award for her book The Everyday World as Problematic A Feminist Sociology 1990 45 In 2019 she was named as a member of the Order of Canada 46 47 Her work is ranked among the most important produced in 20th and 21st Century sociology 48 and it has been suggested that Institutional Ethnography should be considered a contemporary classic 49 The Everyday World as Problematic A Feminist Sociology 1987 EditSmith wrote Everyday World as a Problematic A Feminist Sociology The book is a series of six essays that touch upon her ideas of social life feminist theory Marxism and phenomenology 50 Her concept of the line of fault is the notion of recognizing the male biases as a society and being conscious from a woman s perspective and noticing the inequality between male and female 51 In Toronto while teaching at Ontario Institute of Studies Smith published her paper about everyday lives as a woman and the sociology behind the everyday housewife and mother 52 Her work intended to create a sociology for women as this is a male dominated field Smith wanted to create a field of sociology that questioned the everyday problems of life 53 Selected works EditSimply Institutional Ethnography Creating a Sociology for People 2022 ISBN 978 1487528065 Institutional Ethnography A Sociology for People 2005 ISBN 978 0759105010 Mothering for Schooling co author with Alison Griffith 2004 ISBN 978 0415950534 Writing the Social Critique Theory and Investigations 1999 ISBN 978 0802043078 The Conceptual Practices of Power A Feminist Sociology of Knowledge 1990 ISBN 978 1555530808 Texts Facts and Femininity Exploring the Relations of Ruling 1990 ISBN 978 0415102445 The Everyday World as Problematic A Feminist Sociology 1987 ISBN 978 1555530365 Feminism and Marxism A Place to Begin A Way to Go 1977 ISBN 978 0919888715 Women Look at Psychiatry I m Not Mad I m Angry Collection edited by Smith and David 1975 ISBN 978 0889740006 Press Gang Publishing Sociological Theory Vol 10 No 1 Sociology from Women s Experience A Reaffirmation 1992 54 What It Might Mean to Do a Canadian Sociology The Everyday World as Problematic 1975 55 References Edit Dorothy Edith Smith History amp Feminist theory Smyth Deirdre Mary 1999 A Few Laced Genes Sociology the Women s Movement and the Work of Dorothy E Smith PDF Doctor of Philosophy thesis University of Toronto p 43 Allan Kenneth 2011 Contemporary social and sociological theory visualizing social worlds 2nd ed Los Angeles SAGE p 385 ISBN 9781412978200 Retrieved 5 January 2018 Papers of Dorothy Foster Place Archives Hub Retrieved 17 June 2022 a b Risen Clay 16 June 2022 Dorothy E Smith Groundbreaker in Feminist Sociology Dies at 95 The New York Times Retrieved 16 June 2022 Graham George Valentine Elizabeth R 2004 Identifying the mind selected papers of U T Place New York N Y Oxford University Press p 5 ISBN 978 0195161373 Retrieved 5 January 2018 a b Smith Dorothy Dorothy E Smith Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi Retrieved 14 March 2023 Smith Dorothy 2 February 2005 Dorothy E Smith UQAC Retrieved 5 January 2018 Wallace R amp Wolf A Contemporary Sociological Theory 6th Edition 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall p 297 298 Dorothy Smith History amp Feminist theory SchoolWorkHelper Retrieved 21 October 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Appelrouth S Edles L D 2020 Classical and contemporary sociological theory Text and readings Sage Publications pp 560 566 Masthead Signs Journal of Women in Culture and Society 22 August 2012 Retrieved 22 August 2017 Dorothy E Smith Kudoboard Retrieved 7 June 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Smythe Deirdre April 2009 A few laced genes women s standpoint in the feminist ancestry of Dorothy E Smith History of the Human Sciences 22 2 22 57 doi 10 1177 0952695108101285 ISSN 0952 6951 PMID 19999830 S2CID 27464035 Smith Dorothy E 1992 Sociology from Women s Experience A Reaffirmation Sociological Theory 10 1 88 98 doi 10 2307 202020 JSTOR 202020 Borland Elizabeth Standpoint theory Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 8 March 2023 a b c d e f Appelrouth Scott Edles Laura Delfor 2008 Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory Readings and Text First ed Pine Forge Press ISBN 978 0761927938 Borland Elizabeth Standpoint Theory Encyclopedia Britannica Smith Dorothy E 1992 Sociology from Women s Experience A Reaffirmation Sociological Theory 10 1 88 98 doi 10 2307 202020 JSTOR 202020 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Smith D E 1990 The conceptual practices of power A feminist sociology of knowledge Boston Northeastern University Press Lemert C C 2004 Social theory The multicultural and classic readings 4th ed Boulder CO Westview Press Campbell Marie 2003 Dorothy Smith and Knowing the World We Live In The Journal of Sociology amp Social Welfare Vol 30 Iss 1 Article 2 Carpenter Sara Mojab Shahrzad Institutional ethnography pursuing a Marxist feminist analysis of consciousness PDF Paper presented at the 38th Annual SCUTREA Conference 2 4 July 2008 University of Edinburgh Retrieved 5 January 2018 Smith Dorothy E 2012 The everyday world as problematic a feminist sociology Boston Northeastern University Press p 121 ISBN 978 1 55553 794 4 Trenerry Ruth 2011 A Portfolio of Research Career work An Institutional Ethnography exploring women s career activity in the paid workplace School of Education Division of Education Arts and Social Sciences University of South Australia Retrieved 5 January 2018 Walby Kevin 29 June 2016 On the Social Relations of Research Qualitative Inquiry 13 7 1008 1030 doi 10 1177 1077800407305809 S2CID 143598915 Devault Marjorie L 2006 Introduction What is Institutional Ethnography Social Problems 53 3 294 298 doi 10 1525 sp 2006 53 3 294 JSTOR 10 1525 sp 2006 53 3 294 a b c d e f g Grahame Peter R October 1998 Ethnography Institutions and the Problematic of the Everyday World Human Studies 21 4 347 360 doi 10 1023 A 1005469127008 ISSN 0163 8548 S2CID 144243329 An introduction to Institutional Ethnography and the work of Dorothy E Smith retrieved 5 October 2022 DeVault Marjorie Ruling Relations Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology Hicks Stephen 31 December 2009 Sexuality and the Relations of Ruling Using Institutional Ethnography to Research Lesbian and Gay Foster Care and Adoption Social Work amp Society 7 2 234 245 ISSN 1613 8953 Retrieved 19 July 2020 DeVault Marjorie L 15 February 2007 Ruling Relations in Ritzer George ed The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology Oxford UK John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp wbeosr082 doi 10 1002 9781405165518 wbeosr082 ISBN 978 1 4051 2433 1 retrieved 4 October 2022 Bifurcation Wordnik com Retrieved 5 January 2018 Appelrouth S Edles L D 2020 Feminist and Gender Theories Classical and contemporary sociological theory Text and readings PDF SAGE Publications pp 312 380 Mann D 2008 Understanding society A survey of modern social theory Don Mills Ont Oxford University Press Bowell T Feminist Standpoint Theory Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 5 January 2018 Smith Dorothy 1997 Feminism and Marxism A Place to Begin A Way to Go Vancouver New Star Books Smith Dorothy 1987 The Everyday World as Problematic A Feminist Sociology Northeastern University Press Department The American Women s College Psychology McGrath Michelle Chapter 25 Part 6 Existential Psychotherapy a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Laslett Barbara Thorne Barrie 1992 Considering Dorothy Smith s Social Theory Introduction Sociological Theory 10 1 60 62 doi 10 2307 202016 JSTOR 202016 Dorothy E Smith Award Statement American Sociological Association 9 June 2009 Retrieved 31 December 2017 Scott John 2007 Fifty key sociologists the contemporary theorists 1st ed London Routledge pp 203 204 ISBN 978 0415352567 Retrieved 31 December 2017 Jessie Bernard Award American Sociological Association 29 May 2009 Retrieved 31 December 2017 Outstanding Contribution Award Prix De Contribution Remarquable Canadian Sociological Association Retrieved 31 December 2017 The John Porter Award Le Prix du livre de John Porter Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association Retrieved 31 December 2017 Governor General Announces 83 New Appointments to the Order of Canada Rideau Hall Press Office 27 June 2019 Retrieved 20 July 2020 Lapierre Matthew 27 June 2019 2019 Order of Canada appointees have made their mark on all aspects of Canadian society The Globe and Mail Retrieved 20 July 2020 Zake Ieva DeCesare Michael 2011 New directions in sociology essays on theory and methodology in the 21st century Jefferson N C McFarland pp 50 64 65 ISBN 9780786463428 Retrieved 1 January 2018 Hart RJ amp McKinnon A 2010 Sociological Epistemology Durkheim s Paradox and Dorothy E Smith s Actuality Sociology vol 44 no 6 pp 1038 1054 1 Google Books Smith Dorothy E 1 January 1987 The Everyday World as Problematic A Feminist Sociology University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 6702 9 Dorothy Smith History amp Feminist theory SchoolWorkHelper Retrieved 22 October 2021 Collins Patricia Hill 1992 Transforming the Inner Circle Dorothy Smith s Challenge to Sociological Theory Sociological Theory 10 1 73 80 doi 10 2307 202018 JSTOR 202018 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Smith Dorothy E 1992 Sociology from Women s Experience A Reaffirmation Sociological Theory 10 1 88 98 doi 10 2307 202020 JSTOR 202020 Smith Dorothy E 1975 What It Might Mean to Do a Canadian Sociology The Everyday World as Problematic The Canadian Journal of Sociology 1 3 363 376 doi 10 2307 3340418 ISSN 0318 6431 JSTOR 3340418 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dorothy E Smith amp oldid 1178432594, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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