Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/90685
Title: The arrow of time and the line of life: The deconstruction of linearity
Authors: Veselkova, N.
Vandyshev, M.
Pryamikova, E.
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: National Research University Higher School of Economics
Citation: Veselkova, N. The arrow of time and the line of life: The deconstruction of linearity / N. Veselkova, M. Vandyshev, E. Pryamikova. — DOI 10.17323/1728-192X-2020-1-85-105 // Sotsiologicheskoe Obozrenie. — 2020. — Vol. 1. — Iss. 19. — P. 85-105.
Abstract: The article analyzes the data of sociological research obtained by the Life Line (LL) method among schoolchildren and students of secondary vocational education in small mono-towns of the Sverdlovsk region. Particular attention is paid to the heuristic capabilities of this method in the study of mobility and the construction of narratives of the past, present, and future of young people. The article pursues a twofold goal: first, to subject the experience of using LL to methodological reflection, and secondly, to discuss some research findings obtained using this method. A total of 230 drawings from students and schoolchildren from Krasnoturinsk, Revda, and Pervouralsk are included in the analysis. A brief review of the method's development is given, along with the rationale for the authors' (less-formalized) version. The typology of LL, constructed according to the criteria of a formal structure, helps to analyze the meanings of (non) linearity, paying attention to both the prevailing logic and the variety of configurations. Classical and modern sociological theory has firmly-rooted ideas about the linearity of social change. At the biographical level, movement and the course of life are also described, taking linearity and direction into account. Most of the drawings of our participants adhere to linear logic; however, a great variety is found inside of it, and various options for deviations from the standard arrow from the past to the future are considered separately. Elements of the sketches testifying to territorial identity are of interest. The use of local names and toponyms gives the drawings a specificity and richness, and demonstrates the local competence of the participants. The life line method allows, in the authors' opinion, to demonstrate the diversity and the relative isomorphism of biographical visualizations at the same time, placing it in wider social contexts across a region, country, or even the world. © 2020 National Research University Higher School of Economics.
Keywords: IDENTITY
LIFE COURSE
LIFE LINE
MOBILITY
MONO-TOWN
TEMPORALITY
VISUALIZATION
YOUTH STUDIES
URI: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/90685
Access: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
cc-by
RSCI ID: 42932544
SCOPUS ID: 85086247246
WOS ID: 000522670200004
PURE ID: 12675114
ISSN: 1728-192X
DOI: 10.17323/1728-192X-2020-1-85-105
Appears in Collections:Научные публикации ученых УрФУ, проиндексированные в SCOPUS и WoS CC

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