New Book from Trygve Broch
Work-life pressures on the modern woman shape hair fashions and customs. The ponytail binds hair in practical ways that can echo feminist undercurrents, implying “I’m busy, I’m working, and need my hair OFF my face.” Furthermore, this chapter shows how the ponytail naturalizes women’s presence in male-dominated jobs and roles, and therefore radiates with the social progress of former feminist generations…
Gallery now open: CST conference photos
Explore the essence of our recent conference with the new image gallery! Our website now hosts a gallery showcasing vibrant moments and insightful discussions from the event, offering a compelling snapshot of the dynamic and diverse experience that was the CST Conference in Heidelberg.
New Article by Jeffrey Alexander in Society
“This essay develops a new theoretical and empirical understanding of the contemporary crisis of American democracy. Between November 3, 2020, and January 7, 2021, President Donald Trump battled to overturn the results of the American presidential election, launching myriad lawsuits and pressuring hundreds of electoral officials…
CST Conference Program now available!
The conference program, along with all the abstracts, has been posted!
New course The civil sphere: theory, methodology and case studies, taught by Arteaga Botello Nelson
“Identify and critically understand the theoretical and methodological efforts of the civil sphere theory. The course addresses how the latter accounts for the construction processes of expanded and restricted solidarities in different social and cultural contexts.”
Civil Sphere Theory comes of age! Read about what theorists of Jeffrey Alexander's concept of the civil sphere have been up to
Check out the new special issue: Civil Sphere Theory in Cultural Sociology.
Registration for the Civil Sphere Theory Conference 2023 is now OPEN!
The website for the civil sphere theory conference is UP, and registration is open. Registration will be open from March 6, 2023, to July 31, 2023 and please note that contributors must register by May 15, 2023, to be included in the program…
New Article by Nadya, Alica, and Werner on visual intervention into civil sphere and symbolic boundary theory
“Photographs of migrants can evoke powerful reactions. Since the ‘migration crisis’ of 2015–16, politicians, media, and the public have all expressed strong opinions about people who cross borders. Within the civil spheres of Western democracies, debates about who belongs as a ‘good citizen’, and who should be excluded as an ‘anticivil’ outsider, result in consequences for migrants and locals alike…”
New Article by Maja Gildin Zuckerman and Jakob Egholm Feldt
“Combining Alexander’s (The civil sphere. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2006) account of an assimilatory mode of civil incorporation with his concept of “societalization” (Alexander in Am Sociol Rev 83(6):1049–1078, 2018; What makes a social crisis? The societalization of social problems. Wiley, Hobroken, 2019), we discuss how “re-societalizing” antisemitism led to strong enactment of anti-antisemitism and increased Jewish sub-group anxiety in the civil sphere. Anti-antisemitism in Denmark has historically been integrated into cultural codes and historical narratives in the civil sphere…”