Affiliation:
1. Department of Urban and Environmental Sociology, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, UFZ, Permoserstr. 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany,
Abstract
The social reformer, sociologist and feminist Jane Addams (1860—1935), who established Chicago's Hull House as one of the first settlement houses in America, described her work as experimental, but at the same time she and many of her co-workers rejected the idea of Hull House as a laboratory for social scientific investigation. The present article discusses Addams's unique understanding of social experiment beyond the laboratory. Through `experimental' improvement of social conditions for underserved people and communities in the city of Chicago, Addams and her co-workers perceived the laboratory experiment as an inferior variation of the experiment in society, and not vice versa. Based on the description of experiments at Hull House, this essay attempts to show how different dimensions of experimentation beyond the laboratory can be framed and how alternate phases that combine knowledge production and knowledge application can be conceptually comprised.
Subject
Library and Information Sciences,General Social Sciences
Reference41 articles.
1. Department and Discipline
2. Addams, J. (1970) `Prefatory note', Hull House maps and papers: residents of Hull House, pp. vii-viii. New York: Arno Press. (orig. pub. 1895)
3. Beck, U. (1997) `The world as laboratory', in S. E. Bronner (ed.) Twentieth-century political theory, pp. 356-66. London: Routledge .
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38 articles.
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