This site provides a space for the
study of social movements in the US, including those movements as
linked to transnational and global movements. Our emphasis is on recent
and contemporary movements, but we also aim to provide materials on
earlier movements. We seek to bring together the best insights of
sociology, political science, anthropology, history, cultural studies,
American studies, ethnic studies, women's studies, and other fields
of social movement analysis, as well as the insights of movement activists
inside and outside of academia.
We are particularly interested in helping develop work on the cultural
dimension of social movements. We believe that, despite some excellent
work, the specifically cultural study of social movements remains
relatively undeveloped. We hope to keep a rather open definition
of what cultural approaches to movement analysis might entail, but
one key element is the further refinement of the concept of movement
cultures, a term meant to include all those practices and meaning-making
processes by which those within a given movement express their distinctiveness
vis-à-vis the surrounding culture(s) with which they interact.
These practices and processes include, but are not limited to: rituals
and symbolically charged actions; movement-specific ideologies;
idiolects, jargons, and other special language forms; works of art
and other expressive forms; unique value systems; material culture
objects peculiar to the movement; and various other behaviors and
expressions that enhance movement solidarity, strengthen movement-bred
identities and communicate movement ideas, values, and goals. In
studying these cultural forms we hope to link them up to, rather
than see them as autonomous from, political economy, socio-cultural
institutions, and other structural factors that have previously
been privileged in movement analysis. We view culture neither as
fully autonomous, nor as reducible to these other forces, but as
in complex, mutually constructive interaction with them.
The site currently consists of links to on-line articles, bibliographies,
course syllabi, conferences, a glossary of terms for movement analysis,
and sets of links to historically-oriented and contemporary sites
categorized by movement type.
Folk interested in social movements and culture should also visit the sister site based on my book,
The Art of Protest. That site includes
additional bibliographical materials and links. -- T.V. Reed.