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El. knyga: Routledge Handbook of Cultural Sociology

Edited by (University of California, Davis, USA), Edited by (University of California, Davis, USA), Edited by (University of California Davis, USA)

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The thoroughly revised and updated second edition of the Routledge Handbook of Cultural Sociology provides an unparalleled overview of sociological and related scholarship on the complex relations of culture to social structures and everyday life. With 70 essays written by scholars from around the world, the book brings diverse approaches into dialogue, charting new pathways for understanding culture in our global era.

Short, accessible chapters by contributing authors address classic questions, emergent issues, and new scholarship on topics ranging from cultural and social theory to politics and the state, social stratification, identity, community, aesthetics, and social and cultural movements. In addition, contributors explore developments central to the constitution and reproduction of culture, such as power, technology, and the organization of work.

This handbook is essential reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students interested in a wide range of subfields within sociology, as well as cultural studies, media and communication, and postcolonial theory.

Contributors xii
Acknowledgments xxiv
Introduction: culture, lifeworlds, and globalization 1(10)
Laura Grindstaff
Ming-Cheng M. ho
John R. Hall
PART I Sociological programs of cultural analysis
11(62)
1 The Strong Program in cultural sociology: meaning first
13(10)
Jeffrey C. Alexander
Philip Smith
2 "Culture studies" and the culture complex
23(9)
Tony Bennett
3 Sociologies of culture and cultural studies: reflections on inceptions and futures
32(9)
Jon Cruz
4 Lost in translation: feminist cultural/media studies in the new millennium
41(8)
Suzanna Danuta Walters
5 The cultural turn: language, globalization, and media
49(6)
Mark Poster
6 Cultures of colonialism
55(9)
Nicholas Hoover Wilson
Lucas Azambuja
7 Critique and possibility in cultural sociology
64(9)
Nancy Weiss Hanrahan
Sarah S. Amsler
PART II The place of "culture" in sociological analysis
73(60)
8 What is "the relative autonomy of culture"?
75(10)
Jeffrey K. Olick
9 Formal models of culture
85(10)
John W. Mohr
Craig M. Rawlings
10 Three propositions toward a cultural sociology of climate change
95(9)
Zeke Baker
11 The sociological experience of cultural objects
104(9)
Robin Wagner-Pacifici
12 It goes without saying: imagination, inarticulacy, and materiality in political culture
113(9)
Chandra Mukerji
13 The mechanisms of cultural reproduction: explaining the puzzle of persistence
122(11)
Orlando Patterson
PART III Aesthetics, ethics, and cultural legitimacy
133(54)
14 Cultural traumas
135(9)
Giuseppe Sciortino
15 Modern and postmodern
144(7)
Peter Beilharz
16 Social aesthetics
151(8)
Ben Highmore
17 From subtraction to multiplicity: new sociological narratives of morality under modernity
159(9)
Mary Jo Neitz
Kevin McElmurry
Daniel Winchester
18 Demystifying authenticity in the sociology of culture
168(9)
David Grazian
19 Carnival culture
177(10)
Karen Bettez Hainan
Harini Dilma Gunasekera
PART IV Culture and stratification
187(58)
20 Status distinctions and boundaries
189(9)
Murray Milner Jr.
21 Culture and stratification
198(9)
Omar Lizardo
22 Cultural capital and tastes: the persistence of Distinction
207(9)
David Wright
23 The conundrum of race in sociological analyses of culture
216(10)
Alford A. Young Jr.
24 Sexual meanings, placemaking, and the urban imaginary
226(9)
Amin Ghaziani
25 Access to pleasure: aesthetics, social inequality, and the structure of culture production
235(10)
Ann Swidler
PART V Groups, identities, and performances
245(66)
26 Group cultures and subcultures
247(10)
Gary Alan Fine
27 Culture and micro-sociology
257(8)
Iddo Tavory
28 Culture and identity: a metatheoretical reformulation
265(9)
Andreas Glaeser
29 Public multiculturalism and/or private multiculturality?
274(9)
Rebecca Chiyoko King-O'Riain
30 Bodies, beauty, and the cultural politics of appearance
283(9)
Maxine Leeds Craig
31 Gender performance: cheerleaders, drag kings, and the rest of us
292(10)
Joshua Gamson
Laura Grindstaff
32 Rituals, repertoires, and performances in postmodernity: a cultural-sociological account
302(9)
Ronald N. Jacobs
PART VI Making/using culture
311(86)
33 Culture, social relations, and consumption
313(9)
Frederick F. Wherry
34 The cultural life of objects
322(8)
Claudio E. Benzecry
Fernando Dominguez Rubio
35 Pop culture: from production to socio-technical moments
330(10)
Marshall Battani
36 New amateurs revisited: popular music, digital technology, and the fate of cultural production
340(9)
Nick Prior
37 The fall of cyberspace and the rise of data
349(10)
Martin Hand
38 Culture and the built environment: between meaning and money
359(10)
David Gartman
39 Public institutions of "high" culture
369(9)
Victoria D. Alexander
40 Cultural policy
378(9)
Steven J. Tepper
Alexandre Frenette
41 Rethinking the sociology of media ownership
387(10)
Rodney Benson
PART VII Cultures of work and professions
397(60)
42 Work cultures
399(9)
Robin Leidner
43 Everywhere and nowhere: reconceiving service work as culture
408(9)
Eileen M. Otis
44 Carework: cultural frameworks and global circuits
417(9)
Pei-Chia Lan
45 Legal culture and cultures of legality
426(10)
Susan S. Silbey
46 Medical cultures
436(10)
Mary-Jo Del Vecchio Good
Seth Hannah
47 Science cultures
446(11)
Francesca Bray
PART VIII Political cultures
457(78)
48 Inventing the social, managing the subject: governing mentalities
459(10)
Jackie Orr
49 Making things political
469(9)
Nina Eliasoph
Paul Lichterman
50 Narratives, networks, and publics
478(10)
Ann Mische
Matthew J. Chandler
51 The cultural constitution of publics
488(9)
Yifat Gutman
Jeffrey C. Goldfarb
52 Cultures of democracy: a civil society approach
497(9)
Ming-Cheng M. Lo
53 National culture, national identity, and the culture(s) of the nation
506(9)
Genevihe Zubrzycki
54 The cultural of the political: toward a cultural sociology of state formation
515(10)
Xiaohong Xu
Philip Gorski
55 Postcolonial nation-building and identity contestations
525(10)
Daniel P.S. Goh
PART IX Global cultures, global processes
535(66)
56 Consumerism and self-representation in an era of global capitalism
537(9)
Gary G. Hamilton
Donald Feb
57 Culture and globalization
546(9)
Victoria Reyes
58 Cultures, transnationalism, and migration
555(9)
Michel Wieviorka
59 Migration and cultures
564(9)
Yen Le Espiritu
60 Globalization and cultural production
573(10)
Denise D. Bielby
61 Media technologies, cultural mobility, and the nation-state
583(9)
Scott McQuire
62 Tourism and culture
592(9)
Kevin Fox Gotham
PART X Movements, memory, and change
601(75)
63 Movement cultures
603(9)
Francesca Polletta
64 Cultural movements
612(9)
Elizabeth Cherry
65 Cultural diffusion
621(8)
Elihu Katz
66 Medium theory and cultural transformations
629(10)
Joshua Meyrowitz
67 Culture and collective memory: comparative perspectives
639(9)
Barry Schwartz
68 The changing culture and politics of commemoration
648(9)
Hiro Saito
69 Culture and cosmopolis liquid-modern adventures of an idea
657(9)
Zygmunt Bauman
70 Cosmopolitanism and the clash of civilizations
666(10)
Bryan S. Turner
Index 676
Laura Grindstaff is Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Davis, and a faculty affiliate in Gender Studies, Performance Studies, and Cultural Studies. Her research and teaching focus on the cultural dimensions of sex/gender, race, and class inequality, with a particular emphasis on American media and popular culture. She is the author of The Money Shot: Trash, Class, and the Making of TV Talk Shows as well as numerous articles and essays on aspects of popular culture ranging from sports and cheerleading to reality TV and social media.

Ming-Cheng M. Lo is Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Davis. Lo's research focuses on culture, illness experiences, and civic engagement. She is the author of Doctors within Borders: Profession, Ethnicity, and Modernity in Colonial Taiwan (University of California Press, 2002; Japanese edition, 2014). A recent series of articles addresses the roles of cultural capital and non-dominant cultural resources in health, healthcare, and environmental activism.

John R. Hall is Research Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Cruz and Davis. His published works include Apocalypse: From Antiquity to the Empire of Modernity (Polity, 2009), Visual Worlds (Routledge, 2005, with co-editors), Sociology on Culture (Routledge, 2003, with co-authors), and Cultures of Inquiry (Cambridge University Press, 1999).