New Position as AJCS Managing Editor


In June 2017 I assumed the position of Managing Editor for the American Journal of Cultural Sociology (AJCS).

Below: copy of the formal announcement published this month in the ASA Culture Section newsletter and additional information regarding the aims and scopes of the journal.

New Managing Editor for the American Journal of Cultural Sociology.

The editors are proud to welcome Anne Marie Champagne while expressing our gratitude to her predecessor Shai Dromi, who helped nurture the journal through its early years of development. Ms. Champagne is a PhD candidate in sociology at Yale University. Her research concerns issues of body, embodiment and the social dimensions of aesthetic power. Her dissertation looks at how aesthetics and materiality inform legal, medical, and social approaches to mastectomy and chest reconstruction in transmen and female-identified breast cancer survivors. She is a liaison for the Sociologists for Trans Justice Initiative, web manager for the ASA Section on Body and Embodiment, and ASA Theory Section student representative.

The aims and scope of AJCS:

From modernity’s onset, social theorists have been announcing the death of meaning, at the hands of market forces, impersonal power, scientific expertise, and the pervasive forces of rationalization and industrialization. Yet, cultural structures and processes have proved surprisingly resilient. Relatively autonomous patterns of meaning – sweeping narratives and dividing codes, redolent if elusive symbols, fervent demands for purity and cringing fears of pollution – continue to exert extraordinary effects on action and institutions. They affect structures of inequality, racism and marginality, gender and sexuality, crime and punishment, social movements, market success and citizen incorporation. New and old new media project continuous symbolic reconstructions of private and public life.

As contemporary sociology registered the continuing robustness of cultural power, the new discipline of cultural sociology was born. How should these complex cultural processes be conceptualized? What are the best empirical ways to study social meaning? Even as debates rage around these field-specific theoretical and methodological questions, a broadly cultural sensibility has spread into every arena of sociological study, illuminating how struggles over meaning affect the most disparate processes of contemporary social life.

Bringing together the best of these studies and debates, the American Journal of Cultural Sociology (AJCS) publicly crystallizes the cultural turn in contemporary sociology. By providing a common forum for the many voices engaged in meaning-centered social inquiry, the AJCS will facilitate communication, sharpen contrasts, sustain clarity, and allow for periodic condensation and synthesis of different perspectives. The journal aims to provide a single space where cultural sociologists can follow the latest developments and debates within the field.

We welcome high quality submissions of varied length and focus: contemporary and historical studies, macro and micro, institutional and symbolic, ethnographic and statistical, philosophical and methodological. Contemporary cultural sociology has developed from European and American roots, and today is an international field. The AJCS will publish rigorous, meaning-centered sociology whatever its origins and focus, and will distribute it around the world.

LEARN MORE: Visit AJCS

 

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