
Culture and Society: Contemporary Debates
by Edited by Jeffrey C. Alexander , Steven SeidmanBuy New
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Summary
Table of Contents
Introduction Part I. Analytic Debates: 'Understanding the Relative Autonomy of Culture' introduction | |
The case for culture 1. The human studies | |
2. Values and social systems | |
3. Culture and ideological hegemony | |
4. Signs and language | |
Approaches to culture Functionalist 1. The normative structure of science | |
2. Values and democracy | |
Semiotic 3. The world of wrestling | |
4. Food as symbolic code | |
Dramaturgical 5. Out of frame activity | |
6. The Balinese cockfight as play | |
Weberian 7. Puritanism and revolutionary ideology | |
8. French catholicism and secular grace | |
Durkheimian: 9. Lininality and community | |
10. Symbolic pollution | |
11. Sex as symbol in Victorian purity | |
Marxian 12. Class formation and ritual | |
13. Masculinity and factory labor | |
Post-structuralist: 14. Artistic taste and cultural capital | |
15. Sexual discourse and power | |
Part II. Substantive Debates: Moral Order and Crisis: Perspectives on Modern Culture | |
The Place of Religion: Is modernity a Secular or Sacred Order? Introduction: 1. Social sources of secularization | |
2. The future of religion Wolfgang 3. Civil religion in America | |
The debate over the 'End of Ideology': can secular reason create cultural order? 4. Culture industry revisited | |
5. From consensual order to instrumental control | |
6. The end of ideology in the west | |
7. Beyond coercion and crisis: the coming of an era of voluntary community | |
8. Ideology, the cultural apparatus, and the new consciousness industry | |
Modernism or post-modernism: dissolution of reconstruction of moral order? 9. Post-modernism and the dissolution of moral order | |
10. The post-modern condition | |
11. Modernity versus postmodernity | |
12. Mapping the post-modern. |
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