Books vs. articles: Two ways of publishing sociology
A. Wolfe. Sociological Forum, 5 (3):
477-489(1990)
Аннотация
Sociologists tend to publish either in the form of articles in scholarly journals or in the form of books. This paper attempts to show that not only do specific university departments have scholarly cultures emphasizing one or the other, but that structural and demographic factors — such as location, public or private status, and size — are correlated with each. Book departments tend to be found at exclusive private universities in or near big cities on both coasts, while article-producing departments tend to be in land grant universities in the South and Midwest. Recognizing that such publication decisions are not purely scientific in nature but are also partially socially constructed ought to allow us to have more diversity in how departments structure their scholarly cultures.
ER -
%0 Journal Article
%1 Wolfe90
%A Wolfe, Alan
%D 1990
%J Sociological Forum
%K artikel buch publikation soziologie
%N 3
%P 477-489
%T Books vs. articles: Two ways of publishing sociology
%U http://www.springerlink.com/content/t167g37j31637280/
%V 5
%X Sociologists tend to publish either in the form of articles in scholarly journals or in the form of books. This paper attempts to show that not only do specific university departments have scholarly cultures emphasizing one or the other, but that structural and demographic factors — such as location, public or private status, and size — are correlated with each. Book departments tend to be found at exclusive private universities in or near big cities on both coasts, while article-producing departments tend to be in land grant universities in the South and Midwest. Recognizing that such publication decisions are not purely scientific in nature but are also partially socially constructed ought to allow us to have more diversity in how departments structure their scholarly cultures.
ER -
@article{Wolfe90,
abstract = {Sociologists tend to publish either in the form of articles in scholarly journals or in the form of books. This paper attempts to show that not only do specific university departments have scholarly cultures emphasizing one or the other, but that structural and demographic factors — such as location, public or private status, and size — are correlated with each. Book departments tend to be found at exclusive private universities in or near big cities on both coasts, while article-producing departments tend to be in land grant universities in the South and Midwest. Recognizing that such publication decisions are not purely scientific in nature but are also partially socially constructed ought to allow us to have more diversity in how departments structure their scholarly cultures.
ER -},
added-at = {2009-09-09T10:30:32.000+0200},
author = {Wolfe, Alan},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/204f65e5d08c1b77c2be7f98c74b84a0f/wdees},
description = {SpringerLink - Zeitschriftenbeitrag},
interhash = {589ebb31ecccdba975b7062306aae868},
intrahash = {04f65e5d08c1b77c2be7f98c74b84a0f},
journal = {Sociological Forum},
keywords = {artikel buch publikation soziologie},
number = 3,
pages = {477-489},
timestamp = {2011-10-21T10:05:25.000+0200},
title = {Books vs. articles: Two ways of publishing sociology},
url = {http://www.springerlink.com/content/t167g37j31637280/},
volume = 5,
year = 1990
}