Social Theory Now
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About This Book

The landscape of social theory has changed significantly over the three decades since the publication of Anthony Giddens and Jonathan Turner's seminal Social Theory Today. Sociologists in the twenty-first century desperately need a new agenda centered around central questions of social theory. In Social Theory Now, Claudio E. Benzecry, Monika Krause, and Isaac Ariail Reed set a new course for sociologists, bringing together contributions from the mostdistinctive?sociological?traditions?in an ambitious survey of where social theory is today and where it might be going.The book?provides a strategic window onto social theory based on current research, examining trends in classical traditions and the cutting edge of more recent approaches. From distinctive theoretical positions, contributors address questions about?how social order is accomplished; the role of materiality, practice, and meaning; as well as the conditions for the knowledge of the social world. The theoretical traditions presented include cultural sociology, microsociologies, world-system theory and post-colonial theory, gender and feminism, actor network and network theory, systems theory, field theory, rational choice, poststructuralism, pragmatism, and the sociology of conventions. Each chapter introduces a tradition and presents an agenda for further theoretical development. Social Theory Now is an essential tool for sociologists. It will be central to the discussion and teaching of contemporary social theory?for years to come.

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Yes, you can access Social Theory Now by Claudio E. Benzecry, Monika Krause, Isaac Ariail Reed, Claudio E. Benzecry,Monika Krause,Isaac Ariail Reed in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Sociology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2017
ISBN
9780226475318

CHAPTER ONE

On the Very Idea of Cultural Sociology

ISAAC ARIAIL REED
When it comes to the study of culture in sociology, we have a series of overlapping definitions of the object of study; another set of methodological debates about how to collect and interpret evidence about it; and, finally, a set of theoretical arguments about what it does or does not do to, for, or with actors, people, organizations, nation-states, laboratories, scallops, and so on.1 It can be extremely frustrating for initiates to the subdiscipline of cultural sociology, initiates to the zones of the human sciences concerned with culture in some vaguely similar sense, and old hands at both that we still do not have agreement on definition, method, or theory. Some kind of sad story about a preparadigmatic science appears to threaten the whole enterprise, and academic barbs about studying “culture” are a dime a dozen if you want them, mostly concerning the sheer multitude of subjects studied under the moniker of cultural sociology or cultural studies (some of them, inevitably, inane) and the repetitive instabilities of theoretical debates (some of them, inevitably, unnecessary). And indeed, research in cultural sociology approximates neither the fantastical progress of physics since Newton (imagined or real) nor the esteemed refinement or sophisticated radicalism of literary theory. Instead, cultural sociology exists at the center of a large set of crisscrossing arguments both logical and analogical, based simultaneously on the experience of ethnography and the formalisms of computational text analysis, and ultimately focused on the relationship between meaning and society. This can feel like a mess, and it feels that way because, in many regards, it is a mess. What, then, can be done?
I propose to ask, what is not culture? and from this question derive some insight about the premises of our own queries and definitional difficulties. I do not mean, “what is not culture?” in a set-theoretic sense (a frequently tried and frequently failed strategy for answering “what is culture?”). That is, I do not ask for the set of objects, processes, beings-in-the-world, or areas of study that fall outside of the set of things we label culture. Instead, I mean to ask the question in the Saussurean sense of to what terms and their meanings is the meaning of culture opposed?2 The oppositions that help give the term culture its meaning in academic discourse exist for actual people, some of whom are addressed by this essay—a community of somewhat like-minded researchers working in and around sociology on culture. This community, such as it is, uses a language game derived from both the concerns of American academic sociology and the broader, more global discourse of social theory. For these folks, then, what is culture not?
The question is itself a bootstrapping move; to some, it will appear problematic precisely because it presumes a (relational) theory of meaning derived from semiotics (and from Clifford Geertz).3 But the theory of meaning required here is not very particular at all (“long” has some of its meaning in contrast to “short”; “dog” in contrast to “cat”), and the argument that follows does not depend upon the truth of a specific theory of the causal influence of culture on action or of this or that theory of human language. Furthermore, such bootstrapping may be necessary in response to the interminability of definitional debates. So, let us ask the following questions: to what terms is culture opposed (and by implication, associated with) in our given community of inquiry? And then, what are the differences and similarities between how we understand culture and how we understand its opposites or counterpoints? And thus, finally, what questions do we expect to answer by mentioning culture, by making a cultural argument, or by pursuing a cultural sociology in lieu of other sociologies? This will reveal, I believe, not so much a new definition of culture or an approach that solves the problems of years of debate, but rather what is at stake in the very idea of cultural sociology.

CULTURE AND ECONOMY

Culture is not economy. This would appear to be the sine qua non of the whole beautiful debacle that is social theory, beginning with Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in The German Ideology.4 Something about ideas, beliefs, signified-signifier-referent, theme, genre, symbol, philosophy, religion—something to do with culture—is different, in a yet-to-be-defined way, from the agglomeration of many different instances of two practical actions in the world: making something and exchanging something for something else. The difference between culture and economy, once set out, can be elided, conflated, exaggerated, explained historically, accounted for functionally, referenced obliquely, attacked endlessly, or secretly relied upon to make explanations look good to materialists, but a difference it is. Why is this difference important to us? What does it reflect about the world that we wish to grasp conceptually and highlight in our sociological explanations? And why does it reappear in every generation’s debate about social action?
The conceptual opposition between culture and economy is important, first, because it encodes centuries of thought about the tension between rhetoric and motive, especially when the latter is pecuniary.5 The capacity to convince someone to do something via speech and ideation, without physical coercion—fight in a war, buy a specific brand of beer, and so forth—does not always track directly with who benefits in the doing (however we define or ill-define benefits). The inclination to come up with creative ways to theorize this fact has led to many innovations in sociological theory. Meanwhile, empirical discoveries of complex transitions in how groups of people value goods and actions and act accordingly are some of the most important foci in the field of cultural sociology. Thus, one of the central contributions of cultural sociology has been to render theories of domination and explanations of durable inequalities more intellectually powerful via reference to ideology, hegemony, and symbolic violence. And this requires a difference between professed allegiance (variably believed) and accrued benefit (intended or unintended).
Beyond sociologists’ ongoing interests in the utility of culture to the powers and the interests, the distinction between culture and economy is important for a second reason. To say that culture is not economy suggests that although talking may be part of work, working may underwrite one’s power to be heard, and making art is surely work, there is, nonetheless, a distinction to be made between mental and manual labor in human societies. To meet the biological needs of human animals, certain material things have to be made and produced; societies have arranged themselves differently to meet or not meet these needs for their members. The study of these arrangements is central to the human sciences. However, recognizing the existence of material imperatives and incentives and cataloguing their manifest forms has turned out to be insufficient for explaining the variation in the sinews of production, distribution, and consumption that it is important to examine and explain in social life.6 To get to better explanations of the vast variation in how human social groups arrange to arrange material resources, one has to go out to the movie theater, study how music is composed, read about how gods are worshipped, and much more besides. Then, after immersing oneself in King Lear, the Super Bowl halftime show, and so forth, when one returns to economy, one inevitably views it differently. For if we are forced to come to terms with the intersection between signifiers, subjectivities, and the inherently mental work of giving the world and our actions within it meaning, we will also be forced to contextualize the act of exchange.7
This leap to the mental world of signification and the vast uncharted territories of subjective fantasy is what lends cultural sociology its distinctiveness over and against the occasional invocations of culture that dot economics, political science, and those areas of sociology unconcerned with signification and unmotivated by understanding. It is also the primary reason cultural sociology draws so many concepts and so much energy from the humanities. Finally, the engagement with subjectivity is perhaps the reason why certain egregious misunderstandings of the enterprise emanate from other arenas of social science, whose members routinely accuse cultural sociology of idealism, relativism, and so on.
Cultural sociology does not decide a priori that cultural values will explain some economic outcome. Nor does it insist on viewing economy as the cause of social life in last instance (mediated, between now and infinity, by culture). But cultural sociology does insist on the necessity of examining the relationship between signification and trade, between ideology and interest. Indeed, examining this nexus anew appears, in retrospect, as a tremendous source of creativity for the sociological mind, and each sociological generation revisits the problem. This revisiting is possible because of the meaningful theoretical difference between culture and economy.

CULTURE AND PERSONS

Culture is not a person. Rather people—individual humans—exist in cultural context. What this means is that a person or any aggregate of persons acts or act in a world that is not a Cartesian function of his, her, or their own brains. Rather, the language they speak, the food they eat, or the masculinity they aspire to or detest comes from a meaningful world around them, constituted by other people—both alive and dead—and their communications—present and past. Human action takes place within a semiotic sea, and to explain what I do, you should say something about the water I swim in.
This rather metaphorically stated point is another theoretical locus of debate because it is at the root of the notion that culture mediates. What is mediation? If we locate something in an individual person, within many individual persons, or within persons generally—a drive for power, a need for recognition, a desire to sleep with his or her mother or father—we can then say that this rather inchoate something which is not culture and is part of an individual is, in turn, mediated by culture. It comes to expression via culture, we might say. Thus to understand what occurs in the human world, we must understand that which is within individuals (intentions, unconscious drives, etc.) to take form via culture, in the old Aristotelean sense of a sculptor giving “form” to a statue.8
The mediation of projects, desires, and intentions by cultural context is a very common trope in cultural sociology. Underneath this way of talking is an endemic question of how—and how much—people are made by cultural context. Those researchers who are spellbound by Michel Foucault sense that the individual “essences” that manifest and express themselves through culture are, in fact, also made by it, constituted by it, or come from it. From this perspective, to say culture “mediates” is too weak.9 For the true Foucauldian, the essential characteristics of the subject do not precede (logically, ontologically, or otherwise) that which mediates him, her, or them. So, for example, one might argue that at a given historical conjuncture, not only do sexual desires manifest through a strict and punitive heteronormative culture but also that those desires themselves come about in persons in the first place because of the mesh of (heteronormative) culture.10 However, it is worth pointing out that the claim that culture forms persons into certain kinds of subjects and that tracing that process is key to understanding the historical transformation of the West still relies on a distinction between discourse and persons, for it is persons who are formed by discourse into subjects.

From Persons to Actors

The next leap is both controversial and common: the cultural sociologist replaces actual, concrete individual persons with a more generalized definition of actors and opposes these actors to culture as well. The actors can be nongovernmental organizations, corporations, nation-states, churches, and so on. These, too, are then shown to be subject to their cultural context, discursive formation, illusio, and so forth. The degree to which a shift from persons to a more general notion of actors means a fundamental change in the dynamics that obtain between cultural context and actors is the essence of the debate on the generalizability of certain models of culture and institutions (e.g., field theory).11 It is also possible to consider, as actors, subaspects of individual persons—bodies and psychic drives being the classic examples. Finally, if you really want to put everything in context, and you are really intent on being agnostic about what causes matter to you as a human scientist, you can place material objects in context as well and treat them as actants. But what is retained in all of this is a distinction between culture and that which acts within it and through it—on the one hand, an actant, a person, or an organization and on the other hand, the sociocultural space in which it does its acting.12
Note that many of the oppositions and arguments that obtain between culture and actor also obtain when we relate actor to economy. For we also argue, in sociology, that economic context mediates certain individual intentions, projects, or drives. Thus, an unquenchable lust for power may express itself as the push to be a top producer at a Hollywood studio in the context of postmodern American capitalism rather than a top samurai, as it would have in the context of Japanese feudalism. Furthermore, we know quite well how different individual traits are rewarded differently in different economic systems; this parallels how in different cultural contexts different actions or traits are esteemed or despised. (For example, being neurotic and obsessive about textual meaning can either be prized or scorned, a source of honor and authority or a cause for exclusion.)
These similarities suggest that undern...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. Introduction: Social Theory Now
  6. 1  On the Very Idea of Cultural Sociology
  7. 2  Varieties of Microsociology
  8. 3  Globalizing Gender
  9. 4  World Capitalism, World Hegemony, World Empires
  10. 5  Postcolonial Thought as Social Theory
  11. 6  On the Frontiers of Rational Choice
  12. 7  Systems in Social Theory
  13. 8  The Patterns in Between: “Field” as a Conceptual Variable
  14. 9  Poststructuralism Today
  15. 10  Networks and Network Theory: Possible Directions for Unification
  16. 11  Actor-Network Theory
  17. 12  The Sociology of Conventions and Testing
  18. 13  Norms and Mental Imagery
  19. List of Contributors
  20. Index