This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (October 2012) |
Y. Michal Bodemann | |
---|---|
Born | 9 March 1944 |
Nationality | German/Canadian |
Era | 21st-century philosophy |
Region | European and Western sociology |
School | Max Weber, Georg Simmel, Karl Marx, Chicago School of Sociology |
Main interests | Germans and Jews, Jewish Diaspora, memory, agro-pastoral transformations in Sardinia |
Y. Michal Bodemann is professor emeritus, University of Toronto, sociologist, best known for his work on German Jewry, the concept of ideological labor and "memory theater" (1991) and his contributions to sociological praxis, interventive field work, here in particular, his interventive observation method [1] in qualitative field work. In the approach to interventive observation, Bodemann advocates the reciprocal nature of researcher and the people in a setting, as active participation, against the notion of passive or neutral role of the observer. Bodemann's theoretical foundation continues to be influential against positivist notions of objectivity, which still persist in the field of sociology and in the approach to qualitative methods. His methodological approach is close to that of Michael Burawoy and notions of public sociology. Bodemann is best known for his contributions to Jewish studies, and Holocaust memory his concept of "ideological labour:" where especially ethnic minorities are cast as representing values contrasting those of the larger society. He is the author and editor of books, newspaper and academic articles spanning the entirety of his academic career, in English, German and Italian.