Doktorarbeit / Dissertation, 2008
314 Seiten, Note: Pass
Preface
Introduction
A. Richard Münch on Cultural Accumulation
B. The Contradictions and Dynamics of Modern Development
C. Theoretical Development of Münch’s Sociology
D. Present Application of Münch’s Sociology
I. Economic and Cultural Accumulation in World Cities
A. Cultural Accumulation in World Cities
B. World Cities in the Entrepreneurial Strategies of Urban Development
C. Poststructuralist Critiques: World City Policy-Making and Culture
II. Culture and Economy in Sociological Theory
A. Revitalization of European Sociological Theory
B. Historical Overview of European Sociological Traditions
C. Philosophical Foundations of Parsons’ Social Theory
D. Systematization by Münch of European Classical Traditions
E. Concluding Overview
III. Theory of Action in American Sociological Tradition
A. Münch’s Development of Action Theory
B. Parallels in American Sociology to Münch’s Theorization
C. Individual and Collective Action in Sociological Research
D. Dynamics and Contradictions of Individual and Collective Action
IV. Operationalizing Münch I: A Methodological Excursus on Multi-Sited Anthropology
A. Multi-Sited Applications of Anthropological Methodology
B. Methodological Challenges of the Anthropology on Global Capitalism
C. Relevance and Shortcomings of Multi-Sited Anthropology
V. Operationalizing Münch II: Evaluating ‘Spirits of Capitalism’
A. Ideal-Typical Relations between Economy and Culture
B. Culture and Economy as Historical Ideal Types
C. Analytical Ideal Types of Economy and Culture
VI. Modern Systems of Economic Accumulation
A. The System of Economic Accumulation in the Structure of Modernity
B. Varieties of Capitalism within the Structure of Modernity
C. Theorization of Varieties of Modernity
VII. The Spatial Analysis of Urban Modernity
A. The Spatial Theorization of Urban Modernity
B. The Historical Production of Urban Space
C. The Historiographical Critique of Spatial Analysis
D. Sociological Applications of Spatial Analysis
VIII. The Structure of Modernity in Cities
A. Economic and Cultural Accumulation in Cities
B. Economic, Cultural, Social and Political Accumulation in Cities
C. Urban Structure of Modernity, Accumulation and Action
IX. Strategies of Cultural Accumulation in Cities
A. Urban Strategies of Cultural Clustering
B. Cultural Accumulation via Cultural Clustering
C. Cultural Accumulation as Urban Development
X. Cultural Accumulation of Global Modernity
A. International Art Exhibitions as Cultural Accumulation
B. Philosophical Transition to Global Modernity
C. International Art Institutions vis-à-vis Social, Political, Economic, and Cultural Accumulation
D. Art Museums in the Urban Structure of Modernity
This thesis examines the role of cultural accumulation within urban environments, specifically exploring how global capitalism influences urban development and art institutions through the theoretical lens of Richard Münch’s sociology of modernity, systems, and action.
Cultural Accumulation in World Cities
Arguably embodying the dominant mode of cultural accumulation, New York is one of the cities, the level of intensity of the representation of which few others match. In the city, three museums are especially prominent – the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and the Museum of Modern Art, New York. In the permanent collection exhibitions at the art museums of New York, the assumption of the radical otherness of the modernist moment of art history is at a spatial, institutional, and discursive distance from the expectation that art, architecture or exhibitions, as outcomes of collective practices, contribute to cultural accumulation on their own.
The modern and contemporary art galleries at the Museum of Modern Art, as well as other art museums of Manhattan, appear to contribute to cultural accumulation. However, no terms of reference exist that the theory of art can lend to the understanding of cultural accumulation, as a cultural, social, political or economic phenomenon (Perniola 2004a). Masterworks by the major representatives of artistic avant-gardes, interwar artistic movements, postwar painting styles, and modern and contemporary art groups do not represent unquestionably an organizing scheme of interpretation of art. As art history continues to explore the limits of its inherited assumptions concerning the theory of art (Preziosi 1989; 2006), art exhibitions map the possibilities of artistic practice. For example, in the summer of 2007 the Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibited the paintings of Neo Rauch, a German contemporary artist from the East German city of Leipzig. The museum leaves it to the exhibition’s visitors to connect the formal experiments with grid-like structures of the conceptual sculpture of the 1970s, which they can see on their way through the modern art galleries, with the nearly flat, fragmented pictorial spaces of his paintings.
Introduction: Outlines the research focus on Richard Münch’s theorization of modernity and cultural accumulation as an analytical framework for understanding urban revitalization.
I. Economic and Cultural Accumulation in World Cities: Analyzes how global cities and their art institutions function as key nodes in the networks of global capital and cultural accumulation.
II. Culture and Economy in Sociological Theory: Reviews the historical evolution of European and American sociological thought, emphasizing Münch’s synthesis of classical theories into a comprehensive model of modernity.
III. Theory of Action in American Sociological Tradition: Explores the utility of the Parsonian theory of action, as refined by Münch, for analyzing individual and collective dynamics within modern social structures.
IV. Operationalizing Münch I: A Methodological Excursus on Multi-Sited Anthropology: Discusses the methodological shift toward multi-sited ethnography to capture complex, globalized processes of accumulation.
V. Operationalizing Münch II: Evaluating ‘Spirits of Capitalism’: Applies Münch’s ideal types to the transition of French capitalism, evaluating the analytical utility of the "spirit of capitalism" concept.
VI. Modern Systems of Economic Accumulation: Examines how economic systems are embedded within the broader structure of modernity, avoiding reductivist Marxist interpretations.
VII. The Spatial Analysis of Urban Modernity: Investigates the spatial dimensions of urban social order and how cities have historically produced space through institutional and collective action.
VIII. The Structure of Modernity in Cities: Details how global networks and flows reconstruct the urban structure, shifting policy focuses toward creative economy and cultural accumulation.
IX. Strategies of Cultural Accumulation in Cities: Analyzes specific urban strategies like cultural clustering, which aim to leverage art for revitalization and global positioning.
X. Cultural Accumulation of Global Modernity: Explores the role of international art biennials and museums as philosophical and sociological points of reference in contemporary global modernity.
Richard Münch, Cultural Accumulation, Modernity, Social Systems, Theory of Action, Interpenetration, Global Cities, Multi-Sited Anthropology, Urban Modernity, Capitalism, Sociological Theory, Institutionalization, Cultural Clustering, Economic Accumulation, Social Order.
The thesis explores the application of Richard Münch’s sociological framework—focusing on modernity, systems, and action—to understand how cultural accumulation and economic systems interact within modern urban environments.
The core themes include the dynamics of modern social order, the theoretical role of "interpenetration" between societal subsystems, the operationalization of multi-sited anthropology, and the investigation of urban revitalization strategies through cultural clustering.
The central inquiry seeks to determine if the notion of "cultural accumulation" can serve as an analytical ideal type to provide an explanatory framework for understanding the relationship between culture and economy in global cities.
The research primarily employs the methodology of multi-sited anthropology, integrating theoretical sociological frameworks from Richard Münch with historical and comparative analyses of urban and institutional change.
The main body systematically reconstructs the theories of classical sociologists like Parsons, Weber, and Durkheim, operationalizes them through Münch’s work, and applies them to empirical cases such as the transformation of French capitalism and the role of art museums in global cities like New York.
Key terms include Cultural Accumulation, Theory of Action, Interpenetration, Global Cities, Multi-Sited Anthropology, and Modernity.
Interpenetration is described as a non-reductive process where distinct systems (like economy and culture) mutually transform each other at their boundaries without losing their central identities, serving as the core mechanism of modern social integration.
The evaluation aims to move beyond standard descriptions of capitalistic phases by using Münch’s analytical ideal types to provide a more rigorous, non-deterministic understanding of how economic systems change in relation to normative culture.
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