Ann Swidler (born December 11, 1944) is an American sociologist and professor of sociology at the University of California, Berkeley. Swidler is most commonly known as a cultural sociologist[1] and authored one of the most-cited articles in sociology, "Culture in Action: Symbols and Strategies".[2]
Early life and career
Swidler was born on December 11, 1944. She was raised in Knoxville, Tennessee.[3] Her father was an attorney with the Tennessee Valley Authority and her mother was a secretary.[3] Her family, which is Jewish, experienced anti-Semitism in Tennessee.[3]
Habits of the Heart (1985), co-authored with Robert Bellah, Richard Madsen, William M. Sullivan, and Steven M. Tipton, was finalist for a Pulitzer Prize in 1986,[7] won the Los Angeles Times Book Award in 1985 and received Highest Honors for a Book in Education from the American Educational Studies Association. Habits of the Heart sold over 500,000 copies[8] which, according to sociologist Edward Tiryakian, places the work among "that rare breed of sociological works: a literary event, with sales figures beyond the total number of practicing sociologists in the world, past and present."[9][10]
"Culture in Action: Symbols and Strategies"[11] (1986), argues that rather than just a form of internalized norms controlling behavior—argued by, for instance, Talcott Parsons—culture is a collection or "tool-kit" that people draw on to accomplish particular strategies of action.[12] This is one of the most widely cited articles in sociology[2] and informs the contemporary view in cultural sociology that culture is both constraining and enabling.
Talk of Love: How Culture Matters (2001) attempts to describe the reality of love in relationships amid the idealized and romanticized "talk of love" within American culture. In a review in the American Journal of Sociology, sociologist Michèle Lamont describes the book as "theoretically ambitious" as it "propose[s] nothing less than the reconceptualization of the role that culture plays in organizing social action."[13]
^Fenn, Richard; Hargrove, Barbara; Hoge, Dean R.; Tiryakian, Edward A. (Summer 1986). "Review Symposium: Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life by Robert N. Bellah, Richard Madsen, William M. Sullivan, Ann Swidler, Steven M. Tipton". Sociological Analysis. 47 (2). Association for the Sociology of Religion: 169–173. doi:10.2307/3711461. JSTOR3711461.
^Lamont, Michèle (March 2004). "Reviewed Work: Talk of Love: How Culture Matters by Ann Swidler". American Journal of Sociology. 109 (5). University of Chicago Press: 1201–1203. doi:10.1086/420661.