According to cultural sociologist Jeffrey Alexander (2003, p. 4), the
task of cultural sociology is “to bring the unconscious cultural
structures that regulate society into the light of the mind…we must
learn how to make them visible.” In other words, one goal in the study
of culture is to make the invisible visible. Doing so is important
because we can reveal patterns that may be important for people to
realize, of which they may be otherwise unaware. This may potentially
lead to changes in their attitudes and/or behavior.
In
an article that examines agency in narrative texts, Franzosi and
colleagues (2012) ask "How can we measure something that is not there?" How we
go about making culture visible in a systematic way is the focus of
this page and the project of the Culture Lab in general. Sociologists
and other scholars studying culture employ a range of methods to do so.
We offer brief descriptions of some methods -- Content and Interpretive Analysis, Experiments, Ethnographic Interviews and Survey Research --
along with illustrative examples of studies that employ them. Different
research questions demand different approaches to collecting and
analyzing data. Each method has benefits and weaknesses and selecting a
method is dependent on the question about culture being asked. For more
information about methods of analyzing culture, you may also want to
check out a special issue in Qualitative Sociology titled: Methods, Materials and Meanings: Designing Cultural Analysis.
Why use Content/Textual Analysis versus other Methods to study Culture?
There
are many advantages to systematically analyzing culture through
examining texts such as books, newspapers, films, magazines, or social
media which make up the shared context of the social world. Content
Analysis is especially valuable for its ability to not only capture
trends over time, but to reveal otherwise hard-to-detect, obfuscated
patterns within a mass of cultural messages. Additionally, depending on
the kind of content available, researchers can access purposeful
communication over time (such as laws and policies), as well as
unintentional and covert messages embedded in public discourse and media
content, and can examine variations in content intended for different
audiences. Moreover, textual analysis is an unobtrusive form of studying
communication and has the strong benefit of being replicated by other
scholars to substantiate researchers' findings. Finally, content or
textual analysis enables researchers to answer theoretical questions
about culture with empirical evidence, making for especially compelling
arguments. Other methods can be excellent for assessing culture. Pugh (2013) outlines the benefits of approaching cultural analysis through interview techniques.
How have you measured and analyzed culture? What are examples of other exemplary studies? Continue the conversation here.
References
Alexander, Jeffrey C. 2003. The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology. New York: Oxford University Press.
Franzosi,
Roberto, Gianluca De Fazio, and Stefania Vicari. 2012. "Ways of
Measuring Agency: An Application of Quantitative Narrative Analysis
to Lynchings in Georgia (1875-1930)." Sociological Methodology 42:1-42.
Pugh, Allison. 2013. “What Good Are Interviews for Thinking about Culture? Demystifying Interpretive Analysis.” American Journal of Cultural Sociology 1:42-68.
Wednesday, September 27, 2017
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