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Confronting Culture

Sociological Vistas

Inglis, David / Hughson, John

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1. Auflage August 2003
264 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-0-7456-2561-4
John Wiley & Sons

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Confronting Culture offers a clear and accessible discussion and analysis of the complex field of the sociology of culture, and how it compares with approaches developed within cultural studies.
* An accessible guide to the complex field of the sociological study of culture.
* Unique in showing how sociological understandings of culture often differ from rival approaches in the discipline of cultural studies.
* Introduces the various ways of thinking sociologically about culture that have been developed over the last century.
* Examines the legacy of classical sociology for the sociology of culture, and situates thinking about culture within the historical, cultural and social contexts of the rival schools of thought in the US, UK, France and Germany.
* Examples of topics under discussion include the rise of postmodernism, the American production of culture approach, and the cultural sociology of Pierre Bourdieu.

Acknowledgements.

Introduction: Sociology and Culture.

1. Setting Up the Terrain: Classical Sociology and Culture.

2. High German Seriousness: The Frankfurt School on Culture.

3. An American Tragedy? Mass Culture in the USA.

4. Reading from Right to Left: Culturalism in England.

5. The Empire of Signs: The Semiotics of Culture.

6. Phantasmagoria: Postmodernism and Culture.

7. In the French Style: The Sociology of Pierre Bourdieu.

8. The Land of the Free? Production of Culture in America and
Elsewhere.

Conclusion: Globalization, Reflecivity and the Future.

References.

Index.
"This is a most satisfying book! It covers so much, so well -
the entire field of culture and its various interpretations. I do
not know of any book quite like it." Charles Lemert, Wesleyan
University

"This original and admirable textbook fills an important gap in
the literature. The "sociology of culture" has crucial
implications for our understanding of the concept of culture
itself, so the book should appeal not just to students of
sociology, but also to that far wider constituency, the area of
"cultural studies". No other text, to my knowledge,
fulfils this function and the authors have risen to the challenge
of covering such a large compass of material very successfully."
John Tomlinson, Nottingham Trent University

"Confronting Culture is a truly excellent contribution to
the enhancement of the sociology of culture. It combines
beautifully a direct appreciation of the significance of culture
with an acute analytical perspicuousness." Roland Robertson,
University of Aberdeen

"This book provides a comprehensive introduction to the
sociology of culture. The authors argue that the sociological study
of culture is crucial for understanding what goes on both within
and between particular groups and societies, and more generally for
understanding human social life. They provide a detailed definition
of culture, and relate it to sociological approaches developed in
Germany, France, Great Britain and the United States. In
particular, attention is paid to the Frankfurt School, British and
American mass cultural theorists, the work of Bourdieu, and
poststructuralist and postmodernist thought. The impact of
globalisation and reflexivity upon culture and its study is also
addressed. The authors conclude that the sociology of culture will
continue to make an important contribution to understanding
fundamental aspects of the human condition." Sage Race
Relations
David Inglis is a Lecturer in Sociology at the University of
Aberdeen.

John Hughson is a Lecturer in Sociology in the Department
of Sport and Health at the University of Durham.

D. Inglis, University of Aberdeen; J. Hughson, University of Wolverhampton