Read The Blackwell Companion to Sociology Online
Authors: Judith R Blau
RubeÂn G. Rumbaut is Professor of Sociology at Michigan State University. He is
the Founding Chair of the Section on International Migration of the American
Sociological Association. He has two new books based on the Children of
Immigrants Longitudinal Study, which he directed throughout the 1990s in
collaboration with Alejandro Portes: Legacies: The Story of the New Second
Generation, and Ethnicities: Children of Immigrants in America.
Mike Savage is Professor and Head of the Department of Sociology at the
University of Manchester, UK. His recent works include Social Change and the
Middle Class (edited with Tim Butler, 1995), and Gender, Careers and Organ-
izations (with Susan Halford and Anne Witz, 1997).
Joseph E. Schwartz is Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science
at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. While trained as a sociolo-
gist, his recent research is mostly in the area of behavioral medicine. He is the senior investigator of a longitudinal study of the relationship of work-related
stress to blood pressure and cardiovascular disease.
Pepper Schwartz is Professor of Sociology at the University of Washington in
Seattle. She is past president of the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality and author of books on intimacy and relationships, including American Couples
(with Philip Blumstein), Peer Marriage, and The Gender of Sexuality (with
Virginia Rutter).
Christian Smith is Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill. His studies of religion and social change include The Emergence of
Liberation Theology, Resisting Reagan: The US Central American Peace Move-
ment, Disruptive Religion: The Force of Faith in Social Movement Activism, and
American Evangelicalism: Embattled and Thriving.
Lynn Smith-Lovin is Professor of Sociology at the University of Arizona. She is a former chair of the American Sociological Association section on the Sociology
of Emotions and is currently co-editor of Social Psychology Quarterly and chair
of the American Sociological Association section on Social Psychology. Her
research focuses on identity, social interaction and emotion. She is currently
completing a National Science Foundation funded study of identity and con-
versational interaction.
Carola SuaÂrez-Orozco is co-director of Harvard Immigration Projects and a
lecturer in education in the Human Development and Psychology area. She is
co-author (with Marcelo SuaÂrez-Orozco)of Transformations and Children of
Immigration.
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Contributors
Alain Touraine was appointed Directeur d'eÂtudes in 1960 at Ecole Pratique des
Hautes Etudes, which later became Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales.
He has also taught at Paris-Nanterre University and in Chile, Brazil, the United States and Canada, and has served as President of the French Association of
Sociology and Vice President of the International Sociological Association. The
most recent of his many books that have been translated into English include:
Return of the Actor, Critique of Modernity, What Is Democracy?, Can We Live
Together? Equal and Different, and How to Get out of Liberalism?
Donald J. Treiman is Professor of Sociology at the University of California at Los Angeles. His research focuses on the comparative study of social stratification
and social mobility. For many years he has carried out large-scale worldwide
comparisons of systems of social stratification, and recently conducted sample
surveys in South Africa, Eastern European nations, and the People's Republic of
China, all designed to explore the effect of abrupt social change on stratification outcomes.
John Urry is Professor of Sociology at Lancaster University, and author or joint author of various books, including The End of Organized Capitalism (1987),
The Tourist Gaze (1990), Economies of Signs and Space (1994), Consuming
Places (1995), Contested Natures (1998), and Sociology Beyond Societies
(2000). Research areas include service industries, the environment, leisure and
tourism, urban sociology, and social theory. He is Chair of the UK's Research
Assessment Exercise Sociology Panel in 1996 and 2001.
Peter Wagner is Professor of Social and Political Theory at the European Uni-
versity Institute in Florence and Professor of Sociology at the University of
Warwick. Before 1996 he taught at the Free University of Berlin, and has held
visiting positions at various European and American universities. His publica-
tions include Le travail et la nation, A Sociology of Modernity, and Der Raum
des Gelehrten (with Heidrun Friese).
Immanuel Wallerstein is Director of the Fernand Braudel Center, Binghamton
University; author, most recently, of The End of the World as We Know It: Social Science for the Twenty- first Century; and Chair of the Gulbenkian Commission
for the Restructuring of the Social Sciences (1993±5), whose report is Open the
Social Sciences.
Robert Woodberry is a sociology graduate student at the University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill. His research interests include global religious transformations, and he has also done research on the sampling and measurement of
religious groups on surveys.
Part I
Referencing Globalization
1
The Sociology of Space and Place
John Urry
Introduction
In this chapter I shall show that space (and place) should be central to sociology.
But the history of sociology in the twentieth century has in some ways been the
history of the singular absence of space. This was an absence that could not be
entirely sustained. Here and there space broke through, disrupting pre-existing
notions which were formed around distinctions which had mainly served to
construct an a-spatial sociology. Societies were typically viewed as endogenous, as having their own a-spatial structures. Furthermore, societies were viewed as
separate from each other, and the processes of normative consensus or structural conflict or strategic conduct were conceptualized as internal to each society,
whose boundaries were coterminous with the nation-state. There was little
recognition of the processes of internal differentiation across space.
This was so although the beginning of the twentieth century saw a series of
sweeping technological and cultural changes which totally transformed the
spatial underpinnings of contemporary life (Kern, 1983; Soja, 1989). These
changes included the telegraph, the telephone, X-rays, cinema, radio, the bicycle, the internal combustion engine, the airplane, the passport, the skyscraper, relativity theory, cubism, the stream-of-consciousness novel and psychoanalysis.
However, these changes were not reflected within sociology at the time and
they became the province of a separate and increasingly positivist science of
geography that set up and maintained a strict demarcation and academic divi-
sion of labor from its social scientific neighbors.
In the next section I summarize some of the early ``classical'' writings on space which developed within the context of geography's colonization of the spatial. In the section following I show what in the late 1970s changed this and brought
space into sociology and social theory more generally. In the final section
4
John Urry
analysis is provided of the recent emergence of a research program of a sociology of place, which brings out the importance of diverse spatial mobilities across,
into, and beyond such places.
Thè`Classics''
``Classics'' and Space
The sociological classics dealt with space in a rather cryptic and undeveloped
way. Marx and Engels were obviously concerned with how capitalist industrial-
ization brought about the exceedingly rapid growth of industrial towns and
cities. In The Manifesto of the Communist Party Marx and Engels describe
how fixed, fast-frozen relations are swept away, all newly formed relations
become antiquated before they can ossify, and `àll that is solid melts into air''
(1888, p. 54; Berman, 1983). Marx and Engels argue inter alia that capitalism
breaks the feudal ties of people to their ``natural superiors''; it forces the bourgeois class to seek markets across the surface of the globe and this destroys local and regional markets; masses of laborers are crowded into factories, so concentrating the proletariat and producing a class-for-itself; and the development of trade unionism is assisted by the improved transportation and communication
that capitalism brings in its wake. In his later works, especially Capital, Marx analyzes how capitalist accumulation is based upon the annihilation of space by
time and how this consequently produces striking transformations of agricul-
ture, industry, and population across time and space.
Some similar processes are analyzed by Durkheim, although the consequences
are viewed very differently. In The Division of Labor in Society it is argued that there are two types of society with associated forms of solidarity, mechanical
(based on likeness or similarity) and organic (based on difference and comple-
mentarity). It is the growth in the division of labor, of dramatically increased specialization, that brings about transition from the former to the latter. This heightened division of labor results from increases in material and moral density.
The former involves increases in the density of population in a given area,
particularly because of the development of new forms of communication and
because of the growth in towns and cities. Moral density refers to the increased density of social interaction. Different parts of society lose their individuality as individuals come to have more and more contacts and interactions. This produces a new organic solidarity of mutual interdependence, although on occa-
sions cities are centers of social pathology. Overall Durkheim presented a thesis of modernization in which local geographical loyalties will be gradually undermined by the growth of new occupationally based divisions of labor. In Elemen-
tary Forms Durkheim also presents a social theory of space. This has two
elements: first, since everyone within a society represents space in the same
way, this implies that the cause of such notions is essentially ``social''; second, in some cases at least the spatial representations will literally mirror its dominant patterns of social organization.
Max Weber made very few references to space, although his brother, Alfred
Weber, was a seminal contributor to the theory of industrial location. Max
The Sociology of Space and Place
5
Weber was relatively critical of attempts to use spatial notions in his analysis of the city. He rejected analysis in terms of size and density and mainly concentrated on how the emergence of the medieval city constituted a challenge to the
surrounding feudal system. The city was characterized by autonomy and it was
there for the first time that people came together as individual citizens (Weber, 1921).
The most important classical contributor to a sociology of space and place is
Simmel (Frisby, 1992a, b; Frisby and Featherstone, 1997). He analyzed five basic qualities of spatial forms found in those social interactions that turn an empty space into something meaningful. These qualities are the exclusive or unique
character of a space; the ways in which a space may be divided into pieces and
activities spatially ``framed''; the degree to which social interactions may be
localized in space; the degree of proximity/distance, especially in the city, and the role of the sense of sight; and the possibility of changing locations, and the consequences especially of the arrival of thè`stranger.'' Overall Simmel sees space as becoming less significant as social organization becomes detached from space.
In ``Metropolis and the City'' (in Frisby and Featherstone, 1997), Simmel
develops more specific arguments about space and the city. First, because of
the richness and diverse sets of stimuli in the metropolis, people have to develop an attitude of reserve and insensitivity to feeling. Without the development of
such an attitude people would not be able to cope with such experiences caused
by a high density of population. The urban personality is reserved, detached and blaseÂ. Second, at the same time the city assures individuals of a distinctive type of personal freedom. Compared with the small-scale community, the modern city
gives room to individuals and to the peculiarities of their inner and outer
development. It is the spatial form of the large city that permits the unique
development of individuals who are placed within an exceptionally wide range
of contacts. Third, the city is based on the money economy, which is the source
and expression of the rationality and intellectualism of the city. Both money and the intellect share a matter-of-fact attitude toward people and things. It is money that produces a leveling of feeling and attitude. Fourth, the money economy
generates a concern for precision and punctuality, since it makes people more
calculating about their activities and relationships. Simmel does not so much
explain urban life in terms of the spatial form of the city as provide an early
examination of the effects of ``modern'' patterns of mobility on social life
wherever it is located. He shows that motion, the diversity of stimuli, and the
visual appropriations of places are centrally important features of the modern