articleAmerican Journal of SociologyJan 1, 2003Closed access

Culture in Interaction

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

How does culture work in everyday settings? Current social research often theorizes culture as “collective representations”—vocabularies, symbols, or codes—that structure people’s abilities to think and act. Missing is an account of how groups use collective representations in everyday interaction. The authors use two ethnographic cases to develop a concept of “group style,” showing how implicit, culturally patterned styles of membership filter collective representations. The result is “culture in interaction,” which complements research in the sociology of emotion, neoinstitutionalism, the reproduction of inequality, and other work, by showing how groups put culture to use in everyday life.

Citation impact

701
total citations
FWCI
40.32
Percentile
100%
References
189
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Ethnography
  • Everyday life
  • Sociology
  • Style (visual arts)
  • Social relation
  • Social psychology
  • Epistemology
  • Psychology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
No related works found for this paper.