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Turn-Taking in the Surfing Lineup
Author(s) -
Raúl Sánchez García,
Ken Liberman
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
sociología del deporte/sociología del deporte
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2660-8456
pISSN - 2695-883X
DOI - 10.46661/socioldeporte.5848
Subject(s) - set (abstract data type) , corporate governance , computer science , law and economics , sociology , computer security , public relations , political science , business , management , economics , programming language
This article addresses the specific issue of rules and turn-taking in surfing from an ethnomethodological approach. The naturally occurring coordination of turn-taking of surfers riding ocean waves permits us to examine the nature of organizing local orderlinesses. Operating without officials or external supervision, surfers find ways to enhance safety and keep conflict to a minimum, while avoiding a burdensome structure of rule governance. The microsocial structures that envelop them expose unexpected properties of rules, including a fundamental “occasioned” character that is respectful of the complexity of their affairs. Further, moralities are dependent upon local contingencies that are less than stable and too numerous and shifting to be accounted for by a comprehensive and invariant rule set.

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