000 01569naa a2200181uu 4500
001 0062110420337
003 OSt
005 20190211172909.0
008 100621s2008 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 eng d
100 1 _aPOLLETTA, Francesca
_941217
245 1 0 _aCulture and movements
260 _aThousand Oaks :
_bSAGE,
_cSeptember 2008
520 3 _aThirty years ago, social movement scholars treated culture as just so much noise in structuralist theories of mobilization. Since then, they have become highly attuned to cultural processes, probing how people come to interpret their grievances as political, how culture sets the terms of strategic action, and when movements succeed in changing the rules of the institutional game. The result has been better theories of movements' emergence and impacts but also important insights into culture. In particular, movement analyses have shed light on two questions that have long exercised sociologists of culture. How does culture constrain practical action? Under what conditions does culture serve not to reproduce the status quo but to challenge it? After a brief review of movement scholars' evolving perspectives on culture, the article focuses on movement studies that have contributed to theorizing broader dynamics of cultural innovation and constraint.
773 0 8 _tThe Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
_g619, p. 78-96
_dThousand Oaks : SAGE, September 2008
_xISSN 00027162
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20100621
_b1042^b
_cDaiane
998 _a20100624
_b1007^b
_cCarolina
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c34464
_d34464
041 _aeng