Description
Culture is increasingly important to American social science, but in what way? This book volume addresses the core issues of the sociology of culture—questions about the social role of meaning, on the one hand, and questions about the methods sociologists use to study culture and society, on the other—in a manner that makes clear their relevance to sociology as a whole. Part I of Meaning and Method is made up of essays by leading cultural sociologists on how the turn to culture has changed the sociological study of organizations, economic action, and television, and concludes with Georgina Born’s methodological statement on the sociology of art and cultural production. Part II contains a highly original, and at times heated, debate between Richard Biernacki and John H. Evans on the appropriateness of abstract and quantifiable coding schemes for the sociological study of culture. Ranging from the philosophy of science to the concrete, practical problems of interpreting masses of cultural data, the debate raises the controversy over the interpretation of culture and the explanation of social action to a new level of sophistication.
Author Info
Isaac Reed is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Colorado. He has published articles in Sociological Theory and Cultural Sociology.
Jeffrey C. Alexander is the Lillian Chavenson Saden Professor of Sociology at Yale University, where he is co-director of the Center for Cultural Sociology. Among his many influential books is The Civic Sphere (Oxford University Press, 2006). He is also co-editor of the Yale Cultural Sociology Series (Paradigm Publishers).