Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) D.J. Frank , John Gabler
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) David John Frank earned degrees in sociology from the University of Chicago and Stanford University. He is currently associate professor of sociology and, by courtesy, education, at the University of California-Irvine. His research focuses on environmentalism, higher education, and the criminal regulation of sex–all at the world level. Expanding on the article at hand, he and coauthor Jay Gabler have just completed a book that is forthcoming..., Jay Gabler is a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at Harvard University. His dissertation research draws on the history of children's books in the United States to address the question of change in cultural fields. Related research considers the market for children's material culture with respect to the history and sociology of childhood. A recent article in Poetics with Jason Kaufman reported on their continuing research on cultural capital and the...
ANO 2005
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Sociology of Education
ISSN 0038-0407
E-ISSN 1939-8573
EDITORA SAGE Publications
DOI 10.1177/003804070507800301
CITAÇÕES 5
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 9dab6a4dcbd5121b731649a19dd6438f

Resumo

The changing academic priorities of universities are often discussed but little investigated by social scientists: What accounts for the striking expansions and contractions in disciplinary fields over time? Focusing specifically on the natural sciences, this article articulates a global-institutional argument that holds that deep shifts in ontological conceptions of action and structure over the course of the 20th century fomented shifts in the teaching and research emphases of universities worldwide. Specifically, it hypothesizes that scientific fields that are premised on fixed categories and hierarchies of entities (for example, zoology) declined relative to fields that are premised on dynamic, horizontal networks of entities (for example, physics). In addition, it hypothesizes that as globally institutionalized reality shifted in favor of human, rather than divine, actorhood, fields that position their practitioners as active investigators in a dynamic universe gained ascendance over those that position practitioners as passive observers of a divinely ordered universe. Using data on worldwide faculty composition from 1915 to 1995, the authors found that these shifts indeed transpired—the fixed-categorical fields of astronomy, botany, and zoology declined precipitously, while the dynamic-network fields of geology, biology, chemistry, physics, and mathematics performed much more robustly.

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