Abstract
American Studies is an academic discipline whose object of study is the United States of America and everything associated
with it, and American sociologists largely ignore it. American Studies largely ignores American sociology. What causes this
mutual exclusion? An outline of the disciplinary history of American Studies and journal article citation data show that the
relationship between sociology and American Studies is weak and asymmetrical; American Studies cites sociology more often,
but very little and not by much. I argue that mutual exclusion is due to mutual distrust in methods: sociology sees itself
as a science, while American Studies, with roots in history and literature, does not. This article serves as a case study
in the limits of interdisciplinarity.
with it, and American sociologists largely ignore it. American Studies largely ignores American sociology. What causes this
mutual exclusion? An outline of the disciplinary history of American Studies and journal article citation data show that the
relationship between sociology and American Studies is weak and asymmetrical; American Studies cites sociology more often,
but very little and not by much. I argue that mutual exclusion is due to mutual distrust in methods: sociology sees itself
as a science, while American Studies, with roots in history and literature, does not. This article serves as a case study
in the limits of interdisciplinarity.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-13
- DOI 10.1007/s12108-011-9138-x
- Authors
- Joshua Kjerulf Dubrow, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, 72 Nowy Swiat, 00–330 Warsaw, Poland
- Journal The American Sociologist
- Online ISSN 1936-4784
- Print ISSN 0003-1232