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Jeffrey C. Alexander

 
Wikipedia: Jeffrey C. Alexander

Jeffrey C. Alexander is an American sociologist, and one of the main proponents of Neofunctionalism.

Contents

Career

Alexander gained his BA from Harvard in 1969 and his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley in 1978.[1] 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.[2]

Alexander has authored or co-authored ten books.[1] He is one of the editors of the journal Sociological Theory.[3]

Neofunctionalism

In sociology, neofunctionalism represents a revival of the thought of Talcott Parsons by Jeffrey C. Alexander, who sees neofunctionalism as having 5 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.[4]

Key publications

Articles

  • Alexander JC. (2004) Cultural Pragmatics: Social Performance between Ritual and Strategy. Sociological Theory 22: 527–573

Books

  • 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)

References

  1. ^ a b Yale: Curriculum vitae (accessed 20 December 2008)
  2. ^ "Yale Sociology » Jeffrey C. Alexander". http://www.yale.edu/sociology/faculty/pages/alexander/. Retrieved 2008-12-19. 
  3. ^ Wiley-Blackwell: Sociological Theory index page (accessed 20 December 2008)
  4. ^ A. Ruth Wallace & Alision Wolf, Contemporary Sociological Theory , New Jersey, Pearson Education, 2006 (6th ed.), p. 59.



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