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619 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 6 (2008)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0619 and id is 1 raw text is: INTRODUCTION
The Diversity
of Culture
By
AMY BINDER,
MARY BLAIR-LOY,
JOHN EVANS,
KWAI NG,
and
MICHAEL SCHUDSON

B y 2008, the much publicized cultural turn in
sociology is old news.' How far are we from
the point where we made our initial turn toward
culture? Some say we are in the midst of it
(Friedland and Mohr 2004), while others believe
we are in fact moving beyond it (Bonnell and
Hunt 1999). Rather than debate this question,
our goal in this special volume of The Annals is to
add substance to the claim that all sociology must
concern itself with meaning. The volume will pro-
vide evidence of cultural work being done
throughout the discipline by offering updated
reports from several different sociological sub-
fields. The collection intentionally differs from
other attempts to define cultural sociology from a
particular theoretical position. Rather than aiming
for definitive conclusions, we demonstrate how
culture is already put into use in many areas of
sociological inquiry, some of which, at first glance,
seem to have little to do with culture.
The goal is to provide a justification, not so
much in the form of a theoretical defense, but
more as a practical argument for the growing sig-
nificance of culture to our discipline. To para-
phrase a comment made by critical theorists, our
theory is already inherent in reality-or in other
words, in the concrete research of many sociolo-
gists today. As Jacobs and Spillman (2005) point
out, cultural sociology contributes to other sub-
fields by empirically addressing central theoreti-
cal issues such as agency/structure, macro/micro,
NOTE: The authors are grateful to the University of
California, San Diego's, Social Science Division, the
Department of Sociology, and the Department of
Communication for generously funding the annual cul-
ture conferences in 2005, 2006, and 2007. Richard
Madsen, our department chair, has been generous and
supportive throughout. For his input into the idea of an
edited collection of articles, we thank Calvin Morrill,
who also contributed an excellent piece on organization
theory to the volume. We also thank Julie Odland, man-
aging editor of The Annals, for her assistance. The edi-
tors contributed equally to this project. Our names are
listed alphabetically for convenience.
DOI: 10.1177/0002716208318469

ANNALS, AAPSS, 619, September 2008

6

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