Recent theory and research have reconceptualized categories in markets and in other settings as part of the languages developed to characterize roles in a producer-audience interface. An important development in this work is the characterization of memberships in producer categories and in audiences as potentially partial. Producers often are regarded as members in a category to varying degrees, and audience members share to varying degrees in consensus about the applicability and meanings of category labels. Such partiality gives rise to fuzziness in boundaries, which has implications for the emergence and persistence of categories. A fast-developing literature has explored these implications empirically
Previous research suggested that category spanning causes products to receive lower evaluations by a...
We develop a unifying framework to integrate two of organizational sociology's theory fragments on c...
International audienceWe advocate for more tolerance in the manner we collectively address categorie...
This article examines the effects of market specialization on economic and social outcomes. Integrat...
Research in the sociology of markets finds that schemas and category systems in markets provide fram...
This article examines the effects of market specialization on economic and social outcomes. Integrat...
We propose a formal theory of multiple category memberships. This theory has the potential to unify ...
Markets are social systems. While price is preeminent, it is often insufficient for buyers to determ...
Research in the sociology of markets finds that shared meanings facilitate valuation and exchange by...
mundane labels for referring to people play in social interaction? When and why are such categories ...
Recent research finds that producers assigned to multiple categories receive less attention and legi...
Almost any attempt at classification runs into a boundary problem. Some cases fit neatly into one ca...
In markets, as in all social domains, actorsrely on systems of categories to interpret experiences. ...
Genre assignments help audiences make sense of new releases. Studies from a wide range of market con...
This paper investigates status multiplicity, an under-theorized concept in sociological research. We...
Previous research suggested that category spanning causes products to receive lower evaluations by a...
We develop a unifying framework to integrate two of organizational sociology's theory fragments on c...
International audienceWe advocate for more tolerance in the manner we collectively address categorie...
This article examines the effects of market specialization on economic and social outcomes. Integrat...
Research in the sociology of markets finds that schemas and category systems in markets provide fram...
This article examines the effects of market specialization on economic and social outcomes. Integrat...
We propose a formal theory of multiple category memberships. This theory has the potential to unify ...
Markets are social systems. While price is preeminent, it is often insufficient for buyers to determ...
Research in the sociology of markets finds that shared meanings facilitate valuation and exchange by...
mundane labels for referring to people play in social interaction? When and why are such categories ...
Recent research finds that producers assigned to multiple categories receive less attention and legi...
Almost any attempt at classification runs into a boundary problem. Some cases fit neatly into one ca...
In markets, as in all social domains, actorsrely on systems of categories to interpret experiences. ...
Genre assignments help audiences make sense of new releases. Studies from a wide range of market con...
This paper investigates status multiplicity, an under-theorized concept in sociological research. We...
Previous research suggested that category spanning causes products to receive lower evaluations by a...
We develop a unifying framework to integrate two of organizational sociology's theory fragments on c...
International audienceWe advocate for more tolerance in the manner we collectively address categorie...