fbpx
Wikipedia

Jeffrey C. Alexander

Jeffrey Charles Alexander (born 1947) is an American sociologist, and a prominent social theorist. He is the founding figure in the school of cultural sociology he refers to as the "strong program".

Jeffrey C. Alexander
Born
Jeffrey Charles Alexander

(1947-05-30) May 30, 1947 (age 75)
Academic background
Alma mater
ThesisTheoretical Logic in Sociology (1978)
Doctoral advisorRobert N. Bellah[1]
Other advisorsLeo Lowenthal, Neil Smelser
Influences
Academic work
DisciplineSociology
Sub-disciplineCultural sociology
School or traditionNeofunctionalism
Institutions

Career

He was born May 30, 1947, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[4] Alexander gained his Bachelor of Arts degree from Harvard University in 1969 and his Doctor of Philosophy degree from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1978.[4][5] [6] He was originally interested in Marxist sociology and followed the work of Fred Block and debates in the journal Socialist Revolution, but evolved to a democratic socialist, then left liberal position.[6]

Later he worked with Neil Smelser, Robert N. Bellah, and Leo Lowenthal. Each of whom were on his dissertation committee, with the chair being Bellah, a former student of Talcott Parsons. Alexander's dissertation, Theoretical Logic in Sociology, was published as a four-volume set. Volume 1 was subtitled Positivism, Presuppositions, and Current Controversies, Volume 2 was The Antimonies of Classical Thought: Marx and Durkheim, Volume 3 was The Classical Attempt at Theoretical Synthesis: Max Weber, and Volume 4 was subtitled The Modern Reconstruction of Classical Thought: Talcott Parsons. At the time, many theorists were attempting to revive Parsons after a decade of criticisms, and Alexander's Theoretical Logic in Sociology was part of this revival.

He worked at the University of California, Los Angeles, from 1974 until joining Yale University in 2001, where (as of 2008) he is the Lillian Chavenson Saden Professor of Sociology and co-director of the Center for Cultural Sociology.[7]

Alexander has authored or co-authored ten books.[5] He was one of the editors of the journal Sociological Theory,[8] and he is currently co-editor of the American Journal of Cultural Sociology.[9]

He received honorary doctorates from La Trobe University, Melbourne and the University College Dublin, Ireland. In 2004, he won the Clifford Geertz Award for Best Article in Cultural Sociology and in 2008, he won the Mary Douglas Prize for Best Book in Cultural Sociology. He also received the 2007 Theory Prize from the Theory Section of the American Sociological Association for best theoretical article. In 2009, he received The Foundation Mattei Dogan Prize in Sociology by the International Sociological Association, awarded every four years in recognition of lifetime accomplishments to "a scholar of very high standing in the profession and of outstanding international reputation."[10]

Notable students of Jeffrey Alexander include Ronald Jacobs,[11] Philip Smith,[12] Isaac Reed,[13] Matthew Norton,[14] and Elizabeth Breese.[15]

Neofunctionalism

In sociology, neofunctionalism represents a revival of the thought of Talcott Parsons by Jeffrey C. Alexander, who sees neofunctionalism as having five central tendencies:

  • to create a form of functionalism that is multidimensional and includes micro as well as macro levels of analysis
  • to push functionalism to the left and reject Parsons's optimism about modernity
  • to argue for an implicit democratic thrust in functional analysis
  • to incorporate a conflict orientation, and
  • to emphasize uncertainty and interactional creativity.

While Parsons consistently viewed actors as analytical concepts, Alexander defines action as the movement of concrete, living, breathing persons as they make their way through time and space. In addition he argues that every action contains a dimension of free will, by which he is expanding functionalism to include some of the concerns of symbolic interactionism.[16]

The cultural turn and the strong program

Starting in the late 1980s, Alexander's work turned toward cultural sociology. Key to this cultural turn was a shift in emphasis from an engagement with Parsonian structural functionalism toward a rereading of Emile Durkheim's later works, which featured a strong interest in cultural systems. Durkheim's Elementary Forms of Religious Life was key to Alexander's thought, as in this work Durkheim analyzes the ways by which collective representations emerge and function, as well as the role of rituals in maintaining solidarity and reiterating society's norms and values to the congregation. Alexander picks up specifically on Durkheim's suggestion that the religious processes observed in tribal societies are as pertinent in modern societies. Regardless of whether modern societies believe themselves to be rational and secular, their civil life and processes, claims Alexander, are underpinned by collective representations, by strong emotional ties and by various narratives that—much like tribal societies—tell society what it believes it is and what values it holds sacred.[17]

Alexander distinguishes between the sociology of culture and cultural sociology. The sociology of culture sees culture as a dependent variable—that is, a product of extra-cultural factors such as the economy or interest-laden politics—whereas cultural sociology sees culture as having more autonomy and gives more weight to inner meanings. In other words, in Alexander's conception of cultural sociology assumes that ideas and symbolic processes may have an independent effect on social institutions, on politics, and on culture itself.[18][page needed] Alexander strongly distinguishes this sociological perspective from the then-dominant Bourdieusian sociological framework, which tends to see cultural processes as embedded in power struggles, and ultimately in material inequality.[19]

Cultural trauma

Two of his earlier articles can be seen as precursors to his more direct engagement with the topic of trauma. In one, he demonstrates that the Holocaust was not immediately perceived as universally signifying universal evil for Western societies. Rather than that, it was constructed as such by way of a long process of narration and signification.[20][page needed] In the second, he shows that the Watergate Crisis was originally not perceived by American society as much more than a minor incident. Here, too, the incident had to be culturally narrated and constructed as compromising the core values of American society, turning what was first thought to be a mundane faux-pas into a full-fledged scandal.[21][page range too broad] A key claim of both studies is that even events that are currently thought of as deeply traumatic for civil society are not inherently devastating but are rather constructed as such through cultural processes.

More generally, Alexander differentiates "cultural trauma" from what he calls "lay trauma" in social thought. "Lay trauma" refers to the idea that certain events are inherently traumatic to the individuals who experience them—for example, the idea of trauma in psychology. However, "cultural trauma" approach cannot assume that any event—as horrendous as it may be—will turn into a trauma for the collective who encounters it. As Alexander explains, "[C]ultural trauma occurs when members of a collectivity feel they have been subjected to a horrendous event that leaves indelible marks upon their group consciousness, marking their memories forever and changing their future identity in fundamental and irrevocable ways".[22]

Social performance

In the mid-2000s Alexander turned attention toward the ways actors create social or cultural performances, which are "the social process[es] by which actors, individually or in concert, display for others the meaning of their social situation".[23] Actors, claims Alexander, care deeply about having others believe the meanings they attempt to convey, and to this end they seek to create a performance as authentic-looking as possible. To do so, they engage in what Alexander calls "cultural pragmatics" and draw upon the various elements of social performance: the systems of collective representation, means of symbolic production, mise-en-scène arrangements (much like a theater production would).

Alexander claims that in tribal societies the various elements of cultural performance were tightly fused, and were employed in collective rituals in which the entire tribe partook and its members experienced first-hand. In modern societies, these various elements became de-fused (as per Weber's sphere differentiation) and for this reason actors who wish to appear authentic must draw upon various repertoires. "Fusion", in Alexander's terms, is the moment in a performance when the various elements click together, generate an effective performance, and ultimately move the audience to psychological identification with the actors. A failed performance will be one that the audience will perceive as inauthentic, and will not develop the sense of identification the actors desired.[24]

Iconic consciousness

In recent years, Alexander has turned attention towards the material aspects of culture, extending his specific strand of cultural sociology towards aesthetics and particularly icons. As he defines it, iconic consciousness occurs "when an aesthetically shaped materiality signifies social value. Contact with this aesthetic surface, whether by sight, smell, taste, touch provides a sensual experience that transmits meaning ...".[25] In contradistinction with various sociologies of culture that have tended to see the visual or the material as a form of falsity or degradation, Alexander draws on the Durkheimian notion of the symbolic collective representation to argue that the ways in which culture operates—both in instilling and in recreating values—is intrinsically tied to symbolic material forms.

Studies following Alexander's approach have looked, for example, into the ways in which architecture is embedded in a deep meaning structure and have deep emotional resonance with the society that frequents them.[26] Others have extended the idea of iconic consciousness into the realm of celebrities, and have explored the ways in which celebrities on one hand present an appealing aesthetic "surface" and on the other hand condense and convey a locus of "deep" meanings that resonate with the audience.[27]

Performative revolutions

Following the Egyptian Revolution, Alexander conducted a study of the revolutionary months from a cultural sociological point of view, applying some of his previous theories in order to understand the ways in which the various protests voiced by demonstrators, journalists, bloggers, and public actors ultimately persuaded the Egyptian army to turn against the regime. The key to understanding the revolution, claims Alexander, is in the binary structure these various actors applied to the Moubarak regime, persuasively depicting it as corrupt and outdated and thereby convincing the wider public that it was a menace to Egyptian society.[28][page needed]

Key publications

Selected articles

  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. The Societalization of Social Problems: Church Pedophilia, Phone Hacking, and the Financial Crisis. American Sociological Review, 83 (6): 1049–1078, 2018.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. Culture trauma, morality and solidarity: The social construction of ‘Holocaust’ and other mass murders. Thesis Eleven, 132 (1): 3–16, 2016.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. The Fate of the Dramatic in Modern Society: Social Theory and the Theatrical Avant-Guarde. Theory, Culture & Society, 31 (1): 3-24, 2014.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. Iconic Power and Performance: the Role of the Critic. In: Iconic Power: Materiality and Meaning in Social Life, editor (with Dominik Bartmanski and Bernhard Giesen), Palgrave Macmillan, 25–38, 2012.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. Clifford Geertz and the Strong Program: The Human Sciences and Cultural Sociology. Cultural Sociology, 2(2): 157–169, 2008.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. Iconic Consciousness: The Material Feeling of Meaning. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 26: 782–794. 2008.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. On the Social Construction of Moral Universals. Reprinted in: Alexander et al., Cultural Trauma and Collective Identity. University of California Press, 196–263, 2004.
  • Alexander Jeffrey C. Cultural Pragmatics: Social Performance between Ritual and Strategy. Sociological Theory 22: 527–573. 2004.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. From the Depths of Despair: Performance and Counter-Performance on September 11.. Sociological Theory 22 (1) 2004: 88–105.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. Durkheim's Religious Revival, with Philip Smith (Review Essay, E. Durkheim/K. E. Fields trans., The Elementary Forms of Religious Life). American Journal of Sociology, 102 (2): 585–592, 1996.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. Habermas' New Critical Theory: Its Promise and Problems . American Journal of Sociology. 91: 400–424, 1985
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. Formal and Substantive Voluntarism in the Work of Talcott Parsons: A Theoretical and Ideological Reinterpretation. American Sociological Review, 43: 177–198, 1978.

Recent books

  • Obama Power (with Bernadette Jaworsky, Polity 2014)
  • The Dark Side of Modernity (Polity 2013)
  • Trauma: A Social Theory (Polity 2012)
  • Performative Revolution in Egypt: An Essay in Cultural Power (Bloomsbury USA, 2011)
  • Performance and Power (Polity, 2011)
  • Interpreting Clifford Geertz: Cultural Investigation in the Social Sciences (Palgrave Macmillan, 2011) (ed., with Philip Smith and Matthew Norton)
  • The Performance of Politics: Obama's Victory and the Democratic Struggle for Power (Oxford University Press, 2010)
  • The New Social Theory Reader (2nd edn) (Routledge, 2008) (with Steven Seidman)
  • A Contemporary Introduction to Sociology: Culture and Society in Transition (Paradigm Publishers, 2008) (with Kenneth Thompson)
  • The Civil Sphere (Oxford University Press, 2006)
  • Social Performance: Symbolic Action, Cultural Pragmatics, and Ritual (Cambridge University Press, 2006) (with Bernhard Giesen and Jason Mast)
  • The Cambridge Companion to Durkheim (Cambridge University Press, 2005), (ed., with Philip Smith)
  • Cultural Trauma and Collective Identity (University of California Press, 2004) (with Ron Eyerman, Bernhard Giesen, Neil J. Smelser and Piotr Sztompka)
  • The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology (Oxford University Press, 2003)
  • Narrating Trauma: On the Impact of Collective Suffering (Paradigm Publishers, 2011) (with Ron Eyerman and Elizabeth Butler Breese)

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Lynch & Sheldon 2013, p. 257.
  2. ^ Lynch & Sheldon 2013, p. 258.
  3. ^ a b c Lynch & Sheldon 2013, p. 254.
  4. ^ a b "Alexander, Jeffrey C(harles), 1947–" 2003, p. 4.
  5. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-01-20. Retrieved 2015-01-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ a b "Jeffrey Alexander (1978) | UC Berkeley Sociology Department". sociology.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 2020-07-27.
  7. ^ "Yale Sociology » Jeffrey C. Alexander". Retrieved 2008-12-19.
  8. ^ Wiley-Blackwell: Sociological Theory index page 2011-06-08 at the Wayback Machine (accessed 20 December 2008)
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-11-07. Retrieved 2012-08-29.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-08-10. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2014-10-29.
  12. ^ "Philip Smith : Sociology". Sociology.yale.edu. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-11-08. Retrieved 2014-10-29.
  14. ^ "Matthew Norton - Sociology". Sociology.uoregon.edu. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  15. ^ "Elizabeth Breese - Advertising Age, HuffPost, WIRED Journalist - Muck Rack". Muckrack.com. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  16. ^ Wallace & Wolf 2006, p. 59.
  17. ^ Alexander 2006, pp. 4–6.
  18. ^ Alexander & Smith 2003.
  19. ^ Alexander 1995, pp. 128–217.
  20. ^ Alexander 2003, pp. 27–84; Alexander & Dromi 2012.
  21. ^ Alexander 2003, pp. 155–178.
  22. ^ Alexander 2004b, p. 1.
  23. ^ Alexander 2004a, p. 529.
  24. ^ See also Alexander, Giesen & Mast 2006.
  25. ^ Alexander 2008, p. 782.
  26. ^ Bartmanski 2011.
  27. ^ Alexander 2010; Breese 2010.
  28. ^ Alexander 2011.

Bibliography

  • Alexander, Jeffrey C. (1995). Fin de Siècle Social Theory: Relativism, Reduction, and the Problem of Reason. London: Verso.
  •  ———  (2003). The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-516084-0.
  •  ———  (2004a). "Cultural Pragmatics: Social Performance Between Ritual and Strategy" (PDF). Sociological Theory. 22 (4): 527–573. doi:10.1111/j.0735-2751.2004.00233.x. ISSN 1467-9558. JSTOR 3648932. S2CID 145080054. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  •  ———  (2004b). "Toward a Theory of Cultural Trauma". In Eyerman, Ron (ed.). Cultural Trauma and Collective Identity. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. pp. 1–30.
  •  ———  (2006). The Civil Sphere. London: Oxford University Press.
  •  ———  (2008). "Iconic Consciousness: The Material Feeling of Meaning". Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 26 (5): 782–794. doi:10.1068/d5008. ISSN 1472-3433. S2CID 146688832.
  •  ———  (2010). "The Celebrity-Icon". Cultural Sociology. 4 (3): 323–336. doi:10.1177/1749975510380316. ISSN 1749-9763. S2CID 145739711.
  •  ———  (2011). Performative Revolution in Egypt: An Essay in Cultural Power. London: Bloomsbury Academic.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C.; Dromi, Shai M. (2012). "Holocaust and Trauma: Moral Restriction in Israel". Trauma: A Social Theory. By Alexander, Jeffrey C. Cambridge: Polity Press. pp. 31–96.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C.; Giesen, Bernhard; Mast, Jason L., eds. (2006). Social Performance: Symbolic Action, Cultural Pragmatics, and Ritual. Cambridge Cultural Social Studies. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-67462-1.
  • Alexander, Jeffrey C.; Smith, Philip (2003). "The Strong Program in Cultural Sociology: Elements of a Structural Hermeneutic". The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology. By Alexander, Jeffrey C. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 11–26. ISBN 978-0-19-516084-0.
  • "Alexander, Jeffrey C(harles), 1947–". Contemporary Authors. Vol. 211. Detroit, Michigan: Gale. 2003. pp. 4–7. ISBN 978-0-7876-9203-2. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  • Bartmanski, Dominik (2011). "Successful Icons of Failed Time: Rethinking Post-Communist Nostalgia". Acta Sociologica. 54 (3): 213–231. doi:10.1177/0001699311412625. ISSN 1502-3869. S2CID 146782564.
  • Breese, Elizabeth Butler (2010). "Meaning, Celebrity, and the Underage Pregnancy of Jamie Lynn Spears". Cultural Sociology. 4 (3): 337–355. doi:10.1177/1749975510380317. ISSN 1749-9763. S2CID 220723676.
  • Lynch, Gordon; Sheldon, Ruth (2013). "The Sociology of the Sacred: A Conversation with Jeffrey Alexander". Culture and Religion. 14 (3): 253–267. doi:10.1080/14755610.2012.758163. ISSN 1475-5629. S2CID 5560412.
  • Wallace, A. Ruth; Wolf, Alison (2006). Contemporary Sociological Theory (6th ed.). New Jersey: Pearson Education.

jeffrey, alexander, jeffrey, charles, alexander, born, 1947, american, sociologist, prominent, social, theorist, founding, figure, school, cultural, sociology, refers, strong, program, bornjeffrey, charles, alexander, 1947, 1947, milwaukee, wisconsin, usacadem. Jeffrey Charles Alexander born 1947 is an American sociologist and a prominent social theorist He is the founding figure in the school of cultural sociology he refers to as the strong program Jeffrey C AlexanderBornJeffrey Charles Alexander 1947 05 30 May 30 1947 age 75 Milwaukee Wisconsin USAcademic backgroundAlma materHarvard UniversityUniversity of California BerkeleyThesisTheoretical Logic in Sociology 1978 Doctoral advisorRobert N Bellah 1 Other advisorsLeo Lowenthal Neil SmelserInfluencesRobert N Bellah 2 Emile Durkheim 3 Talcott Parsons 3 Edward Shils 3 Academic workDisciplineSociologySub disciplineCultural sociologySchool or traditionNeofunctionalismInstitutionsUniversity of California Los AngelesYale University Contents 1 Career 2 Neofunctionalism 3 The cultural turn and the strong program 3 1 Cultural trauma 3 2 Social performance 3 3 Iconic consciousness 3 4 Performative revolutions 4 Key publications 4 1 Selected articles 4 2 Recent books 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 BibliographyCareer EditHe was born May 30 1947 in Milwaukee Wisconsin 4 Alexander gained his Bachelor of Arts degree from Harvard University in 1969 and his Doctor of Philosophy degree from the University of California Berkeley in 1978 4 5 6 He was originally interested in Marxist sociology and followed the work of Fred Block and debates in the journal Socialist Revolution but evolved to a democratic socialist then left liberal position 6 Later he worked with Neil Smelser Robert N Bellah and Leo Lowenthal Each of whom were on his dissertation committee with the chair being Bellah a former student of Talcott Parsons Alexander s dissertation Theoretical Logic in Sociology was published as a four volume set Volume 1 was subtitled Positivism Presuppositions and Current Controversies Volume 2 was The Antimonies of Classical Thought Marx and Durkheim Volume 3 was The Classical Attempt at Theoretical Synthesis Max Weber and Volume 4 was subtitled The Modern Reconstruction of Classical Thought Talcott Parsons At the time many theorists were attempting to revive Parsons after a decade of criticisms and Alexander s Theoretical Logic in Sociology was part of this revival He worked at the University of California Los Angeles from 1974 until joining Yale University in 2001 where as of 2008 he is the Lillian Chavenson Saden Professor of Sociology and co director of the Center for Cultural Sociology 7 Alexander has authored or co authored ten books 5 He was one of the editors of the journal Sociological Theory 8 and he is currently co editor of the American Journal of Cultural Sociology 9 He received honorary doctorates from La Trobe University Melbourne and the University College Dublin Ireland In 2004 he won the Clifford Geertz Award for Best Article in Cultural Sociology and in 2008 he won the Mary Douglas Prize for Best Book in Cultural Sociology He also received the 2007 Theory Prize from the Theory Section of the American Sociological Association for best theoretical article In 2009 he received The Foundation Mattei Dogan Prize in Sociology by the International Sociological Association awarded every four years in recognition of lifetime accomplishments to a scholar of very high standing in the profession and of outstanding international reputation 10 Notable students of Jeffrey Alexander include Ronald Jacobs 11 Philip Smith 12 Isaac Reed 13 Matthew Norton 14 and Elizabeth Breese 15 Neofunctionalism EditIn sociology neofunctionalism represents a revival of the thought of Talcott Parsons by Jeffrey C Alexander who sees neofunctionalism as having five central tendencies to create a form of functionalism that is multidimensional and includes micro as well as macro levels of analysis to push functionalism to the left and reject Parsons s optimism about modernity to argue for an implicit democratic thrust in functional analysis to incorporate a conflict orientation and to emphasize uncertainty and interactional creativity While Parsons consistently viewed actors as analytical concepts Alexander defines action as the movement of concrete living breathing persons as they make their way through time and space In addition he argues that every action contains a dimension of free will by which he is expanding functionalism to include some of the concerns of symbolic interactionism 16 The cultural turn and the strong program EditStarting in the late 1980s Alexander s work turned toward cultural sociology Key to this cultural turn was a shift in emphasis from an engagement with Parsonian structural functionalism toward a rereading of Emile Durkheim s later works which featured a strong interest in cultural systems Durkheim s Elementary Forms of Religious Life was key to Alexander s thought as in this work Durkheim analyzes the ways by which collective representations emerge and function as well as the role of rituals in maintaining solidarity and reiterating society s norms and values to the congregation Alexander picks up specifically on Durkheim s suggestion that the religious processes observed in tribal societies are as pertinent in modern societies Regardless of whether modern societies believe themselves to be rational and secular their civil life and processes claims Alexander are underpinned by collective representations by strong emotional ties and by various narratives that much like tribal societies tell society what it believes it is and what values it holds sacred 17 Alexander distinguishes between the sociology of culture and cultural sociology The sociology of culture sees culture as a dependent variable that is a product of extra cultural factors such as the economy or interest laden politics whereas cultural sociology sees culture as having more autonomy and gives more weight to inner meanings In other words in Alexander s conception of cultural sociology assumes that ideas and symbolic processes may have an independent effect on social institutions on politics and on culture itself 18 page needed Alexander strongly distinguishes this sociological perspective from the then dominant Bourdieusian sociological framework which tends to see cultural processes as embedded in power struggles and ultimately in material inequality 19 Cultural trauma Edit Two of his earlier articles can be seen as precursors to his more direct engagement with the topic of trauma In one he demonstrates that the Holocaust was not immediately perceived as universally signifying universal evil for Western societies Rather than that it was constructed as such by way of a long process of narration and signification 20 page needed In the second he shows that the Watergate Crisis was originally not perceived by American society as much more than a minor incident Here too the incident had to be culturally narrated and constructed as compromising the core values of American society turning what was first thought to be a mundane faux pas into a full fledged scandal 21 page range too broad A key claim of both studies is that even events that are currently thought of as deeply traumatic for civil society are not inherently devastating but are rather constructed as such through cultural processes More generally Alexander differentiates cultural trauma from what he calls lay trauma in social thought Lay trauma refers to the idea that certain events are inherently traumatic to the individuals who experience them for example the idea of trauma in psychology However cultural trauma approach cannot assume that any event as horrendous as it may be will turn into a trauma for the collective who encounters it As Alexander explains C ultural trauma occurs when members of a collectivity feel they have been subjected to a horrendous event that leaves indelible marks upon their group consciousness marking their memories forever and changing their future identity in fundamental and irrevocable ways 22 Social performance Edit In the mid 2000s Alexander turned attention toward the ways actors create social or cultural performances which are the social process es by which actors individually or in concert display for others the meaning of their social situation 23 Actors claims Alexander care deeply about having others believe the meanings they attempt to convey and to this end they seek to create a performance as authentic looking as possible To do so they engage in what Alexander calls cultural pragmatics and draw upon the various elements of social performance the systems of collective representation means of symbolic production mise en scene arrangements much like a theater production would Alexander claims that in tribal societies the various elements of cultural performance were tightly fused and were employed in collective rituals in which the entire tribe partook and its members experienced first hand In modern societies these various elements became de fused as per Weber s sphere differentiation and for this reason actors who wish to appear authentic must draw upon various repertoires Fusion in Alexander s terms is the moment in a performance when the various elements click together generate an effective performance and ultimately move the audience to psychological identification with the actors A failed performance will be one that the audience will perceive as inauthentic and will not develop the sense of identification the actors desired 24 Iconic consciousness Edit In recent years Alexander has turned attention towards the material aspects of culture extending his specific strand of cultural sociology towards aesthetics and particularly icons As he defines it iconic consciousness occurs when an aesthetically shaped materiality signifies social value Contact with this aesthetic surface whether by sight smell taste touch provides a sensual experience that transmits meaning 25 In contradistinction with various sociologies of culture that have tended to see the visual or the material as a form of falsity or degradation Alexander draws on the Durkheimian notion of the symbolic collective representation to argue that the ways in which culture operates both in instilling and in recreating values is intrinsically tied to symbolic material forms Studies following Alexander s approach have looked for example into the ways in which architecture is embedded in a deep meaning structure and have deep emotional resonance with the society that frequents them 26 Others have extended the idea of iconic consciousness into the realm of celebrities and have explored the ways in which celebrities on one hand present an appealing aesthetic surface and on the other hand condense and convey a locus of deep meanings that resonate with the audience 27 Performative revolutions Edit Following the Egyptian Revolution Alexander conducted a study of the revolutionary months from a cultural sociological point of view applying some of his previous theories in order to understand the ways in which the various protests voiced by demonstrators journalists bloggers and public actors ultimately persuaded the Egyptian army to turn against the regime The key to understanding the revolution claims Alexander is in the binary structure these various actors applied to the Moubarak regime persuasively depicting it as corrupt and outdated and thereby convincing the wider public that it was a menace to Egyptian society 28 page needed Key publications EditSelected articles Edit Alexander Jeffrey C The Societalization of Social Problems Church Pedophilia Phone Hacking and the Financial Crisis American Sociological Review 83 6 1049 1078 2018 Alexander Jeffrey C Culture trauma morality and solidarity The social construction of Holocaust and other mass murders Thesis Eleven 132 1 3 16 2016 Alexander Jeffrey C The Fate of the Dramatic in Modern Society Social Theory and the Theatrical Avant Guarde Theory Culture amp Society 31 1 3 24 2014 Alexander Jeffrey C Iconic Power and Performance the Role of the Critic In Iconic Power Materiality and Meaning in Social Life editor with Dominik Bartmanski and Bernhard Giesen Palgrave Macmillan 25 38 2012 Alexander Jeffrey C Clifford Geertz and the Strong Program The Human Sciences and Cultural Sociology Cultural Sociology 2 2 157 169 2008 Alexander Jeffrey C Iconic Consciousness The Material Feeling of Meaning Environment and Planning D Society and Space 26 782 794 2008 Alexander Jeffrey C On the Social Construction of Moral Universals Reprinted in Alexander et al Cultural Trauma and Collective Identity University of California Press 196 263 2004 Alexander Jeffrey C Cultural Pragmatics Social Performance between Ritual and Strategy Sociological Theory 22 527 573 2004 Alexander Jeffrey C From the Depths of Despair Performance and Counter Performance on September 11 Sociological Theory 22 1 2004 88 105 Alexander Jeffrey C Durkheim s Religious Revival with Philip Smith Review Essay E Durkheim K E Fields trans The Elementary Forms of Religious Life American Journal of Sociology 102 2 585 592 1996 Alexander Jeffrey C Habermas New Critical Theory Its Promise and Problems American Journal of Sociology 91 400 424 1985 Alexander Jeffrey C Formal and Substantive Voluntarism in the Work of Talcott Parsons A Theoretical and Ideological Reinterpretation American Sociological Review 43 177 198 1978 Recent books Edit Obama Power with Bernadette Jaworsky Polity 2014 The Dark Side of Modernity Polity 2013 Trauma A Social Theory Polity 2012 Performative Revolution in Egypt An Essay in Cultural Power Bloomsbury USA 2011 Performance and Power Polity 2011 Interpreting Clifford Geertz Cultural Investigation in the Social Sciences Palgrave Macmillan 2011 ed with Philip Smith and Matthew Norton The Performance of Politics Obama s Victory and the Democratic Struggle for Power Oxford University Press 2010 The New Social Theory Reader 2nd edn Routledge 2008 with Steven Seidman A Contemporary Introduction to Sociology Culture and Society in Transition Paradigm Publishers 2008 with Kenneth Thompson The Civil Sphere Oxford University Press 2006 Social Performance Symbolic Action Cultural Pragmatics and Ritual Cambridge University Press 2006 with Bernhard Giesen and Jason Mast The Cambridge Companion to Durkheim Cambridge University Press 2005 ed with Philip Smith Cultural Trauma and Collective Identity University of California Press 2004 with Ron Eyerman Bernhard Giesen Neil J Smelser and Piotr Sztompka The Meanings of Social Life A Cultural Sociology Oxford University Press 2003 Narrating Trauma On the Impact of Collective Suffering Paradigm Publishers 2011 with Ron Eyerman and Elizabeth Butler Breese References EditFootnotes Edit Lynch amp Sheldon 2013 p 257 Lynch amp Sheldon 2013 p 258 a b c Lynch amp Sheldon 2013 p 254 a b Alexander Jeffrey C harles 1947 2003 p 4 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 01 20 Retrieved 2015 01 20 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Jeffrey Alexander 1978 UC Berkeley Sociology Department sociology berkeley edu Retrieved 2020 07 27 Yale Sociology Jeffrey C Alexander Retrieved 2008 12 19 Wiley Blackwell Sociological Theory index page Archived 2011 06 08 at the Wayback Machine accessed 20 December 2008 Editorial office American Journal of Cultural Sociology Archived from the original on 2012 11 07 Retrieved 2012 08 29 Jeffrey Alexander Awarded Foundation Mattei Dogan Prize Center for Cultural Sociology Archived from the original on 2014 08 10 Retrieved 2014 07 30 University at Albany SUNY Archived from the original on 2014 10 06 Retrieved 2014 10 29 Philip Smith Sociology Sociology yale edu Retrieved 1 October 2017 Isaac Ariail Reed Sociology Department Archived from the original on 2014 11 08 Retrieved 2014 10 29 Matthew Norton Sociology Sociology uoregon edu Retrieved 1 October 2017 Elizabeth Breese Advertising Age HuffPost WIRED Journalist Muck Rack Muckrack com Retrieved 1 October 2017 Wallace amp Wolf 2006 p 59 Alexander 2006 pp 4 6 Alexander amp Smith 2003 Alexander 1995 pp 128 217 Alexander 2003 pp 27 84 Alexander amp Dromi 2012 Alexander 2003 pp 155 178 Alexander 2004b p 1 Alexander 2004a p 529 See also Alexander Giesen amp Mast 2006 Alexander 2008 p 782 Bartmanski 2011 Alexander 2010 Breese 2010 Alexander 2011 Bibliography Edit Alexander Jeffrey C 1995 Fin de Siecle Social Theory Relativism Reduction and the Problem of Reason London Verso 2003 The Meanings of Social Life A Cultural Sociology New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 516084 0 2004a Cultural Pragmatics Social Performance Between Ritual and Strategy PDF Sociological Theory 22 4 527 573 doi 10 1111 j 0735 2751 2004 00233 x ISSN 1467 9558 JSTOR 3648932 S2CID 145080054 Retrieved November 5 2018 2004b Toward a Theory of Cultural Trauma In Eyerman Ron ed Cultural Trauma and Collective Identity Berkeley California University of California Press pp 1 30 2006 The Civil Sphere London Oxford University Press 2008 Iconic Consciousness The Material Feeling of Meaning Environment and Planning D Society and Space 26 5 782 794 doi 10 1068 d5008 ISSN 1472 3433 S2CID 146688832 2010 The Celebrity Icon Cultural Sociology 4 3 323 336 doi 10 1177 1749975510380316 ISSN 1749 9763 S2CID 145739711 2011 Performative Revolution in Egypt An Essay in Cultural Power London Bloomsbury Academic Alexander Jeffrey C Dromi Shai M 2012 Holocaust and Trauma Moral Restriction in Israel Trauma A Social Theory By Alexander Jeffrey C Cambridge Polity Press pp 31 96 Alexander Jeffrey C Giesen Bernhard Mast Jason L eds 2006 Social Performance Symbolic Action Cultural Pragmatics and Ritual Cambridge Cultural Social Studies Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 67462 1 Alexander Jeffrey C Smith Philip 2003 The Strong Program in Cultural Sociology Elements of a Structural Hermeneutic The Meanings of Social Life A Cultural Sociology By Alexander Jeffrey C New York Oxford University Press pp 11 26 ISBN 978 0 19 516084 0 Alexander Jeffrey C harles 1947 Contemporary Authors Vol 211 Detroit Michigan Gale 2003 pp 4 7 ISBN 978 0 7876 9203 2 Retrieved November 5 2018 Bartmanski Dominik 2011 Successful Icons of Failed Time Rethinking Post Communist Nostalgia Acta Sociologica 54 3 213 231 doi 10 1177 0001699311412625 ISSN 1502 3869 S2CID 146782564 Breese Elizabeth Butler 2010 Meaning Celebrity and the Underage Pregnancy of Jamie Lynn Spears Cultural Sociology 4 3 337 355 doi 10 1177 1749975510380317 ISSN 1749 9763 S2CID 220723676 Lynch Gordon Sheldon Ruth 2013 The Sociology of the Sacred A Conversation with Jeffrey Alexander Culture and Religion 14 3 253 267 doi 10 1080 14755610 2012 758163 ISSN 1475 5629 S2CID 5560412 Wallace A Ruth Wolf Alison 2006 Contemporary Sociological Theory 6th ed New Jersey Pearson Education Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jeffrey C Alexander amp oldid 1117371365, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.