in
Patrick Joyce (edited by) The Social in Question. New
Bearings in History and the Social Sciences, Routledge,
London, pp.117-132.
a)
" Le caractère
bizarre et grimaçant de la réalité, visiblement
déchirée de guerres intestines suivies de boiteuses
transactions, suppose la multiplicité des agents du monde. "
b)
Monadologie et sociologie,
p. 93
" Au fond de on , en cherchant bien
nous ne trouverons jamais qu'un certain nombre de ils et
de elles qui se sont brouillés et confondus en se
multipliant. "
Les lois sociales, p.61
c)
In
order to contribute to this volume on the "social and its
problems", I could have talked about what is known as "actor
network theory", or ANT, a deliberate attempt at terminating the
use of the word "social" in social theory to replace it with
the word "association". But I have decided to share with the readers
the good news that ANT actually has a forefather, namely Gabriel
Tarde, and that, far from being marginalised orphans in social
theory, our pet theory benefits from a respectable pedigree.
As is written in the official history of
the discipline, Tarde, at the turn of the former century, was
the major figure of sociology in France, professor at the Collège
de France, the author of innumerable books, whereas Durkheim was,
at the time, a younger, less successful upstart teaching in the
province. But a few years later, the situation had been
completely reversed and Durkheim became the main representant
of a scientific discipline of sociology while Tarde had been evacuated
in the prestigious but irrelevant position of mere "precursor"
—and not a very good one at that, since he had been for
ever branded with the sin of 'psychologism' and 'spiritualism'.
Since then, main stream social theory has never tired of ridiculing
Tarde's achievement and I must confess that I myself never enquired
further than the dismissive footnotes of the Durkheimians to check
what their rejected 'precursor' had really written.
And
yet, I want to argue in this chapter, through a close reading
of his recently republished most daring book, Monadologie et
sociologie (M&S), that Tarde introduced into social theory the
two main arguments which ANT has tried, somewhat vainly, to champion:
a)
the nature and society divide is irrelevant for understanding the world
of human interactions ;
b)
the micro/macro distinction stifle any attempt at understanding
how society is being generated.
In
other words, I want to make a little thought experiment and imagine
what the field of social sciences would have become in the last
century, had Tarde's insights been turned into a science instead
of Durkheim's. Or may be it is that Tarde, a truly daring but
also, I have to admit, totally undisciplined mind, needed a rather
different century so as to be finally understood. It could be
argued that a thinker of networks before their time could not
transform his intuitions into data, because the material world
he was interested in was not there yet to provide him with any
empirical grasp. Things are different now that the technological
networks are in place and that many of the argument of Tarde can
be turn into sound empirical use. Whatever is the case, what I really want to
do is to present to social theorists my not totally respectable
grandfather... not for the sake of genealogy building, but because,
on a few technical points of horrendous difficulty, Tarde possessed
the solution we have been looking in vain for so long. It is thus to a portrait of actor-network as
a precursor of Tarde that I want to devote this paper.
Just to get a flavour of the character
and understand why he appealed so much to Gille Deleuze, here is how Tarde presented his daring research
program in M&S :
Is this not a good grandfather the one who encourages you
to think through as daringly as possible because there is nothing
worse than half-baked 'ghost of ideas' ? Is it not the case
that most of the social sciences is made out of those fleeting
ghosts, neither theoretical nor concrete, but merely general and
abstract ? Instead of establishing sociology on a complete
rupture with philosophy, ontology and metaphysics, as Durkheim
will be so proud of doing, Tarde goes straight at them and reclaims
as his duty to connect social theory with bold assumptions about
the furniture of the world itself. The reader begins to understand,
I hope, why Tarde had not a chance in 1900 and why I am so thrilled
to feel his genes acting in me, since I have never been able to
decide whether I was a metaphysician or a sociologist. If I use
extended quotes for this chapter, it is so as to provide his ideas
with another chance to spreadÉ
The strange specificity of human
assemblages
The
shock of reading S&M begins with the very first pages since
instead of talking about " the social " as
a specific domain of human symbolic order, Tarde begins with a
research agenda, everywhere on the rise in the sciences, according
to him, and that he calls monadology : " The monads, Leibniz' daughters, have come a long way
since their father " p.32, he states in the first sentence
of the book, just after having repeated in the exergue Hypotheses
fingo. We are indeed very far from Durkheim. What is a monad ?
It is the stuff out of which the universe is built. But it is
a strange stuff, since monads are not material entity only since
they are possessed by faith and desire —the verb
'possess', as we shall see at the end, takes a great importance
in Tarde.
No
spiritualism nor idealism to expect from this affirmation though,
since monads are also completely materialist : they are guided
by no superior goal, no grand design, no telos. Each of
them, much like Richard Dawkins's genes or Susan Blackmore memes,
fights for its own privately envisioned goal. Finally, monads lead to a thoroughly reductionist
version of metaphysics since the small always holds the key to
the understanding of the big. "The main objection against
the theory of monads, is that (É) it puts, or seems to put, as
much or even more, complexity at the basis of phenomena that at
their summit'' p.69.
But,
here again, Tarde offers a very odd type of reductionism since
the smallest entities are always richer in difference and complexity
than their aggregates or that the superficial appearances that
we observe from far away. For a reason we will understand later,
the small is always also the most complex : "[the atom]
is a milieu that is universal or that aspires to becomes
such, a universe in itself, not only a microcosmos,
as Leibniz intended, but the cosmos conquered in its entirety
and absorbed by a single being'' p.57 (his underline). Or even
more tellingly : "In the bosom of each thing, there reside
every other thing real and possible'' p.58.
It
is with this bizarre arrangement of apparently contradictory metaphysics
that we have to familiarise ourselves if we want to understand
why Tarde had so completely ended the social —or refused
to begin with it.
In
the same way as Tarde refuses to take society as a higher, more
complex, order than the individual monad, he refuses to take the
individual human agent as the real stuff out of which society
is made : a brain, a mind, a soul, a body is itself composed
of myriad's of 'little persons', or agencies, each of them endowed
with faith and desire, and actively promoting one's total version
of the world. Agency plus influence and imitation, is exactly
what has been called, albeit with different words, an actor-network.
The link of the two ideas is essential to understand his theory :
it is because he is a reductionist —even of a strange sort—
that he does not respect any border between nature and society,
and because he does not stop at the border between physics, biology
and sociology that he does not believe in explaining the lower
levels by the higher levels. Such is the key difficulty :
human societies are not specific in the sense that they would
be symbolic, or made of individual, or due to the existence of
a macro organisations. They seem specific to us for no
other reasons that, first, we see them from the inside and, second,
that they are composed of few elements compared to any of the
other societies we grasp only from the outside.
Let's
get slowly here : to begin with, we have to understand that
'society' is a word that can be attributed to any association :
Instead
of saying, like Durkheim, that we "should treat social facts
as a thing'', Tarde says that "all things are society'', and
any phenomenon is a social fact. Nothing extraordinary nor imperialistic
here : this does not mean, as with Auguste Comte, that sociology
has to occupy the throne to rule over the sciences, but simply
that every science has to deal with assemblages of many interlocking
monads. The expression 'plant sociology' has existed long before
human sociology ; 'société stellaire' or 'atomique'
is an expression one will find often in Whitehead ; Bergson,
the successor of Tarde at the Collège de France, would
feel perfectly at ease with this sentence, and so would contemporary
specialists in 'mimetics' although in a completely different context.
Tarde's idea is simply that if there is something special in human
society it is not be determined by any strong opposition
with all the other types of aggregates and certainly not by some
special sort of arbitrarily imposed symbolic order which will
put it apart from " mere matter ". To be a
society of monads is a totally general phenomenon, it is the stuff
out of which the world is made. There is nothing especially new
in the human realm.
So
where does the specificity of human societies come from ?
From two very odd features : if there is one privilege we
have when talking about human societies is that we see them from
the inside out so to speak. "When one reaches human societies
(É) we feel at home, we are the true components of those coherent
systems of persons called cities or states, regiments or congregations.
We know everything that happens inside''p.68. Thus we can easily
check that for the only aggregate we know well, no emergent superorganism
takes over from the mesh of competing monads. This is the most
clearly anti-spencerian as well as anti-durkheimian argument and
we have to quote it at length to get the point right :
The
argument is so radical that any one in her right mind will recoil
from it, but don't forget the motto of Tarde's epistemology :
the fear of ridicule is not a philosophical virtue. The only reason
we believe in emergent properties for the brain of an embryo is
because we don't see the aggregates it links together from the
inside. But in the case of human societies, we know for sure that
there exist no moi collectif since the representant is
never a Leviathan, like Hobbes's 'mortal god', but is always,
one of us, born from a mother and father an simply able to 'individualise
the group in him or herself'. If there is no macro society in
human group, there is none anywhere. Or to put it in an even more
counter-intuitive way : the smaller is always the bigger
entity there is.
To
make sense of it, we have to add the other feature that makes
human society apart, which appears even queerer at first :
those assemblages are not only seen from the inside, they are
also made of very few elements, compared to all the other societies.
A polyp, a brain, a stone, a gas, a star, are made of much vaster
collections of monads than human societies. In a hilarious moment,
Tarde compares the biggest human society of his time, China, with
any one of the others. What is a society made of only 300 millions
of elements (the size of China at the time) ? "An organism
that would contain such a limited number of basic anatomic
components would be inevitably located in the lowest degrees of
vegetality and animality'' p.64 (all underlines in quotes are
his) ! Any brain is made of more than 300 million aggregates,
any speck of dust, any microliter of gas. For most of the societies
we consider we have only statistical information averaging out
billions of interactions, so we tend to find obvious that for
them there is a huge gap between the atomic element and the macroscopic
phenomenon. But not for human societies which are made of so few
entities : for those, to which we pertain, we know for sure
that every single macro factor is made out of determined pathways
for which there exist thoroughly empirical traces. No one, in
human society can come and claim that, in order to go from one
interaction to the next, you have to shift scale and go through
a Society or any such Big Animal. Since for the only case we know
well, human societies, the small holds the big, it must be the
same, Tarde argues, for all the others, except we don't have the
slightest idea on how to reach the monad levels of stones, gas
and particles without changing scales. We embrace them only statistically.
The macro is nothing but
a slight extension of the micro
We
are so used in the social sciences to speak of levels of complexities,
of higher order, of emergent properties, of macrostructure, of
culture, societies, classes, nation states, that no matter how
many times we hear the argument, we immediately forget it and
starts ranking local interactions from the smallest to the biggest
as if we could not think without stuffing Russian dolls one neatly
into the next. But Tarde is heterarchic through and through.
The big, the whole, the great, is not superior to the monads,
it is only a simpler, more standardised, version of one of
the monad's goal which has succeeded in making part of its view
shared by the others.
"Those beautiful coordinations (such as the Civil Codexx) must
have been conceived before being put to execution ; they
must have begun to exist only as a few ideas hidden in a few cerebral
cells before covering an immense territory", he writes in Les
Lois sociales (a slightly more disciplined and better
composed book published in 1898) p. 116. Tarde is so completely reductionist than even
the standardisation —so typical of macroscopic effect—
is always brought back to the influence of one element from below
—but 'below' is of course not the right metaphor.
Here
again we should go slowly. The first difficulty is to grasp how
the big manages not to emerge out of the small but to foreground
some of its features. Tarde's answer appears pretty strange at
first :
As
in Stendhal's novel, The Charterhouse of Parma, Fabrice
in Waterloo fills a more complex world than the whole history
of the battle that Napoleon has waged —and lost, as any
Eurostar commuter like me knows too wellÉ Tarde can be said to
have invented microhistory many decades before its discoverers,
in the same way as he has invented ANT long before we had any
inkling of what a network looked like when he wrote in Les
lois sociales (from now on LS) this stunning research program :
He
goes so far, in his reductionism —or reverse reductionism
since the small is always more complex— that in S&M
he uses the same argument on language, the holy place of structuralist
explanations, the only indisputable case where the difference
between langue and parole should be obvious —but
not for him. "People who speak, all with different accents, intonations,
pitches, voices, gestures : here is the social element, the
true chaos of discordant heterogeineities. But on the long run,
from this confusing Babel, a few general habits will be outlined
which can be formulated in grammatical laws.'' p.74 (if not otherwise
mentioned all quotes are from M&S). Against any argument in
terms of structure beyond or beneath speech acts, Tarde imagines
a kind of sociolinguistics, of pragmatics absolutely opposite,
in which the structure is only one of the simplified, routinized,
repetitive element of one of the locutors who has managed
to include his or her local tradition into the general idiom. And there is nothing wrong with this standardisation
and extension, since it will immediately allows the monads to
differ again, as he immediately adds continuing the sentence
above :
Macro
features are so provisional and have so little ability to rule
over the occurrences that they only manage to serve as an occasion
for more differences to be generated ! Instead of a structure
of language acting through our speech acts, the more structural
elements float around in the shape of grammars, dictionary, exemplars,
the more they will allow speech acts to differ from one another !
Nowhere has the branch of pragmatics dared moving so far as to
say that the structure of language is one speech act among
billions of others, a coordination tool that pushes even further
the proliferation of differing locutions.
The
treatment reserved for language, gives an idea of what Tarde is
going to do for the social. Instead of moving from, let's say,
Goffman to Parsons, when going from face to face interactions
to 'bigger' social structure, Tarde keeps the same method for all the
levels —there are no levels anyway. Another long quote is
necessary here, so odd is the argument at first. To get it, the
reader should remember that the big is never more than the simplification
of one element of the small :
Extraordinary
picture of a social order constantly threatened by immediate decomposition
because no component is fully part of it. Every monad overspills
the artificial being of any 'superior' order, having lend for
allowing its existence only a tiny part, a facade of itself !
You can enrol some sides of the monads, but you can never
dominate them. Revolt, resistance, break down, conspiracy, alternative
is everywhere. Doesn't have one the impression of reading Deleuze
and Guattari Mille Plateaux ? The social is not the
whole, but a part, and a fragile one at that !
Understandably,
no position can be further from the professional reflex of the
social sciences. As Tarde explains with some passion in Les
lois sociales :
To
be a good sociologist one should refuse to go up, to take a larger
view, to compile huge vistas ! Look down, you sociologists.
Be even more blind, even more narrow, even more down to earth,
even more myopic. Am I not right in invoking him as my grand father ?
Is he not asking us to join what I have called 'oligopticon' instead
of panoptica ? Is he not advocating what I have called the
'flat society' argument ? The 'big picture', the one that
is provided by this typical gesture of sociologists drawing with
their hands in the air a shape no bigger than a pumpkin, is always simpler and more localised than the
myriad of monads it expresses only in part : it could not
be without them, but without it, they would still be something.
Far from being the milieu in which human grow and live,
the social is only a tiny set of narrow standardised connections
which occupies only some of the monads some of the times, on the
condition that their metrology be strictly enforced and upkept
before being inevitable broken up by the inner resistance of the
pullutation of infinitesimal actants. As soon as you leave those
tiny networks, you are no longer in the social, but down in a
confusing 'plasma' composed of myriad of monads, a chaos, a brew,
that social scientists will do everything to avoid staring in
the eyes.
There
was no way, it should be clear by now, that Durkheim and Tarde
could reconcile their view of the social even though they agree
to criticise Spencer. They both believe that his biological metaphors
are useless to understand human societies, but for totally different
reasons. Durkheim fights Spencers because the sui generis human
society is irreducible to biological organisms. Tarde fights Spencer,
because there exist no organism anyway : since all organisms
are societies, human societies cannot be an organism and certainly
not a superorganism. This common rejection does not mean that
our two forefathers agree, because of an argument that Durkheimians,
to these days, have never forgiven Tarde for making : they
have simply taken the explanandum for the explanans.
Tarde expresses his surprise at Durheim's uses of the word sociology
with great politeness but a devastating irony when he writes in
LS :
It
is not only the case that Durkheim has taken society as the cause
instead of seeing that it is never more than a highly provisional
consequence used as a mere occasion for monads to differentiate
yet again, he also has made, according to Tarde, the more damning
mistake of distinguishing the social laws from the agents
acted by those laws. "We have just seen that the evolution
of sociology has led it, here as elsewhere, to descend from the
fanciful heights of vague and grandiose causes to the infinitesimal
actions which are both real and precise.'' p. 118 LS. As we saw
in the quote a few pages back, Tarde cannot believe that 'while
man agitates himself a law of evolution leads him'. There is no
law in social theory that could differ from the monads themselves.
It is this distinction between a law and what is subject to the
law, no matter how obvious it is for the rest of the social sciences,
that Tarde has dismantled with his monadology. This complete shift
in the epistemology is the last, but also the most arduous, point
I want to tackle in this chapter. But before getting his argument
right, we have to understand why he too has made the study of
science central to his argument in social theory.
Science studies as the test
bed of social theory
When
Tarde wishes to present the best case of what he has in mind when
analysing human societies, it is always history of science that
comes forward. He puts science studies dead in the centre of social
theory, a good 80 years before it was invented ! Is the reader
now convinced that he is our ancestor and that I am not making
up this genealogy simply out of fear of embracing an orphan theory ?
For all the other aspects of human societies, the paths that leads
a monad to its spread (we would say the actor and its network)
may be lost or erased through custom and habits. There is one
exception however, which makes it the most telling example for
social theory, and that is the way scientific practice goes from
one tiny brain in an isolated laboratory all the way to become
the race's common sense. The tracability of science is complete :
In
the same way that no one can claim that society is bigger than
the monads for the human society we see from the inside, no one
can claim for history of science that there exist a Zeitgeist
somewhere, or a culture that could explain (away) why any innovation
has spread from one place to the next. We might not be able to
document all the moves making the human society coherent through
influence, imitation, contamination and routinisation, but we
can document it for the unique case of history of science since
we benefits from the high quality tools of what we would call
nowadays scientometrics.
We
should not be put off by the notion of an 'imitative ray'. Tarde's
vocabulary is a bit odd, but any reader of mimetics can replace
imitative ray by any other more modern metaphor about mutation,
kinship selection, reproductive strategy and the like. We may
also use the notion of an actor-network to account for the tie
between Galileo's discovery and the farm boy's hesitation. Nor
should we be worried that we have traded a sociological theory
for a psychological version, as if Tarde was appealing to individual
scientists as innovators to make his point. Although this is what
Durkheimians have tried to make him say, no sociology was ever
further from psychology than Tarde's. How can one make the author of this stunning
sentence the ancestor of methodological individualism ? "In
any one, if we look carefully, we will find nothing but
a certain number of he and she that have blurred
and confounded themselves through their multiplications'' p. 61
LS. Exactly as in ANT, whenever you want to understand a network,
go look for the actors, but when you want to understand an actor
go look through the net the work it has traced. In both cases,
the point is to avoid the passage through the vague notion of
society. This is why the word 'scientific genius' takes under
his pen a very strange meaning : we are suddenly faced with
a complete redistribution of agencies into a myriad not only of
other scientists, but also of brain states !
And
this is the man who has been charged with the sin of psychologism,
individualism and, even worse, spiritualism ! The one who
dare reducing Newton's mechanisms to the 'gloire cérébrale'
of some brain states ! Even Richard Dawkins, a militant defender
of Allan Sokal's epistemology, has not dared reducing his innovations
to the mutations of some parts of his brains fighting for supremacy :
" To
have or not to have, that is the question "
It
is at this point that Tarde's epistemology begins really to pay
off. As is clear from the last quote, the agencies to deal with,
the ones we really have to consider if we wish to explain something
are neither human agents nor social structures, but the monads
themselves in their efforts to constitute unstable aggregates,
what we would call actants or world-building entelechies. Science is not what allows us to study the monads from the
outside, as if we were finding the laws of their behaviour, but
one of the ways in which they spread and make sense of
their world-building activity. Contrary to Leibniz's monads, they
are not connected by any preestablished harmony, and of course
for Tarde, there is no God to hold together or pacify his specific
sort of metaphysical Darwinism.
In
this extraordinary sentence, Tarde sends both materialists and
spiritualists to the drawing board, since they both make the distinction
between the actions of the agent and the laws that act on those
agents. To speak of laws of nature that would preside over the
activity of blind atoms, is even more spiritualist than to endow
those atoms with some will and purposes, since it implies that
those laws are 'listening to' and 'obey to' some voice over which
has never been 'uttered by any one'. Materialists believe in 'mystical
commandment' because their epistemology divorces science from
what actants themselves do when they try to make sense of their
own aggregations.
In
a way, a good thirty years before Whitehead, Tarde tries to find
a solution to the 'bifurcation of nature'. Instead of having two vocabularies, one for
the agent and one for the causes that make the agents act, one
can do with only one, on the condition of allowing the agent to
concentrate the whole under some sort of point of view or folding : as I have already quoted, a monad is "a universe
in itself, not only a microcosmos, as Leibiniz intended,
but the cosmos conquered in its entirety and absorbed by a single
being'' p.57. The sciences —or more exactly the collective
theories acting of their own by propagation from brain states
to brain states— are also launching themselves to this conquest,
but in so doing they don't write down the laws of nature, they
add more differences to it. "In the bosom of each thing,
there reside every other thing real and possible'' p.58
We
may now be better equipped to grasp this sentence of Monadologie
et sociologie which was going to have so much influence on
Deleuze :
But
what is going to be the bridge allowing one to go from one difference
to the next ? Identity is ruled out. What then ? Possession !
In one of the most important sentence of his work, Tarde remarks
almost in passing :
Here
goes Hamlet, as well as Descartes with his cogito, Heidegger
with his Being qua Being, together with thousand of homelies
about the superiority of what 'we are' above what 'we have'. Quite
the opposite, Tarde instructs us. Nothing is more sterile than
identity philosophy —not to mention identity politics—
but possession philosophy —and may be possession politics ?—
create solidarity and attachments that cannot be matched. "For
thousands of years, people have catalogued the many ways of beings,
the many kinds of beings, and no one ever had the idea of cataloguing
the various kinds, the various degrees of possession. Yet, possession
is the universal fact, and there is no better term than that of
'acquisition' to express the formation and the growth of any being''
p. 89. If essence is the way to define an entity within
the 'To be' philosophy, for the 'To have' philosophy an entity
is defined by its properties and also by its avidityÉ
No way to escape from Tarde's logic : take any monad, if
you look at what are its properties and its proprietors, you will
be led to define the whole cosmos, which would be impossible if
you had only tried to define the essence of an isolated identity.
This
rejection of the philosophy of identity has one final consequence,
which is of course crucial for us ANT sociologists : the
status of non-humans, for which we have been so often criticised.
The crossing of the boundary between humans and non humans has
raised many problems for our readers and is often taken as the
touchstone on which our social theory should stand or fall. But
Tarde offers, a hundred years in advance, a much sturdier solution
to this problem, when he shifts attention from essences to properties.
"The whole outside universe is composed of souls different from
mine, but, in effect, similar to mine'' p.44. This is not, in
spite of the word 'soul' a spiritualist argument, but only a way
of ending an hypocrisy that claims to say what non-humans are
—their identity— and abstaining meticulously from
saying what they want —their avidity, possession
or properties. After Descartes, here goes Kant and his thing in
itself.
The
logical impossibility that has been so vehemently reproached to
ANT scholars —how can you impute will and belief to scallops,
microbes, door closers, rocks, cars and instruments when it is
always you the humans that does the talking— finds in Tarde
a radical but healthy solution : if you don't want to share
avidity and belief with the things you have, then also stop
to say what they are. The accusation is upturned and the burden
of proof shifted to the accusators. Abstain from the ridiculous
solution to say that things exist in themselves but that you cannot
know them. Either you talk or you remain silent. But you cannot
possibly speak and say that the things you speak about are not
in some ways similar to you : they express through you a
sort of difference that has you, the speaker, as one of
their proprietors. What looks like an impossibility with the philosophy
of identity, offers no difficulty with the philosophy of 'alteration'.
Possession is another way of talking about translation.
After
this too brief presentation of some of Tarde's arguments in the
metaphysics of social theory, we may now understand why so much
of ANT appears difficult, and why Tarde's tradition has remained
so far without real descendance : sociologists don't want
to be had.
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Michel et Bruno Latour (1981), "Unscrewing
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Theory and Methodology. Toward an Integration of Micro and Macro
Sociologies, London, Routledge, p. 277-303.
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Gilles (1968), Différence et répétition, Paris,
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Gille (1988), Le Pli. Leibniz et le Baroque, Paris, Minuit.
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Gille (1993), The Fold. Leibnitz and the Baroque (translated by Tom Conley),
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Emmanuel (2001), De l'échantillon
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Richard A. (1990), "Ethnomethodology
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Bruno (1988), Irreductions part II of The Pasteurization of France,
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