Theory, Culture & Society

Theory, Culture & Society was launched in 1982 to cater for the resurgence of interest in culture in the social sciences. It has built up a large international and multidisciplinary readership through its ability to raise and discuss emergent social and cultural issues in an open, non-partisan manner.

Theory, Culture & Society has sought to critically explore the relationship between culture and society and advocated a more central role for social and cultural theory in understanding social life. TCS has worked across the borderlines between sociology and cultural studies, the social sciences and the humanities and has moved towards a broader transdisciplinary frame of reference.

Because we increasingly see the need to rethink many of the existing Western-centred knowledge classifications in a more dialogical global context, the scope of the journal, in terms of the issues addressed, contributors and readership, has become increasingly global. One indicator of this has been the development of the TCS New Encyclopaedia Project since 2001 with the first volume of the project produced as a Theory, Culture & Society special issue on Problematizing Global Knowledge in 2006.

The Theory, Culture & Society Book Series has published so far more than 150 titles. The series includes volumes by many of the leading figures in the field such as: Jean Baudrillard, Zygmunt Bauman, Ulrich Beck, Pierre Bourdieu, Christine Buci-Glucksmann, Norman Denzin, Norbert Elias, Scott Lash, Michel Maffesoli, Roland Robertson, Nigel Thrift, Bryan Turner, John Urry and Michel Wieviorka.

Our companion journal, Body & Society, was launched in 1995.

Further reading: TCS History | TCS Events

Editorial Team

Mike Featherstone Editor-in-Chief

Mike Featherstone
Editor-in-Chief

Mike Featherstone is a Professor of Sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London. He has been the founding editor of Theory, Culture & Society since its establishment in 1982 at Teesside University, and was founding co-editor of Body & Society in 1995, becoming editor-in chief in 2008.  He is also the founding editor of the Theory, Culture & Society Book Series which started in 1990.

He is the author of Consumer Culture and Postmodernism (1991, second edition 2007) and Undoing Culture: Globalization, Postmodernism and Identity (1995). Co-author of Surviving Middle Age (1982). Editor of Postmodernism (1988), Global Culture (1990), Georg Simmel (1991) Cultural Theory and Cultural Change (1992), Love and Eroticism (1999), Body Modification (2000). Co-editor of The Body: Social Process and Cultural Theory (1991), Global Modernities (1995), Cyberspace/Cyberbodies/Cyberpunk: Cultures of Technological Embodiment (1995), Images of Ageing (1995), Simmel on Culture (1997), Spaces of Culture (1999) and Recognition and Difference (2002), Automobilities (2005), Problematizing Global Knowledge (2006).

He is also the author of numerous journal articles and book chapters on social and cultural theory, consumer and global culture, ageing and the body. His books and articles have been translated into sixteen languages. Consumer Culture and Postmodernism has been translated into Chinese, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Portuguese, Swedish, Spanish and Turkish. Undoing Culture has been translated into Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Italian and Portuguese. Other books and articles have been translated into Bulgarian, Croatian, French, German, Hungarian and Ukrainian. He has spent time as a visiting professor in Barcelona, Geneva, Kyoto, Recife, São Paulo, Singapore, Tokyo and Vancouver.

 
Sunil Manghani Managing Editor

Sunil Manghani
Managing Editor

Sunil Manghani is Professor of Theory, Practice & Critique and Deputy Head of School, Director of Research at Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton, UK. He is a co-opted trustee for the Council for Higher Education in Art and Design, and also an associate member of Tate Exchange; University of Southampton’s Web Science Institute; and the Alan Turing Institute’s AI for Arts interest group. He teaches and writes on various aspects of critical theory, visual arts and image studies. He is author of Image Studies: Theory and Practice (2013), and editor of Zero Degree Seeing: Barthes/Burgin and Political Aesthetics (2019); India’s Biennale Effect: A Politics of Contemporary Art (2016); Farewell to Visual Studies (2015), Images: A Reader (2006), and a special issue of Theory, Culture & Society: ‘Neutral Life/Late Barthes’ (2020). 

 
Rainer Winter Managing Editor

Rainer Winter
Managing Editor

Rainer Winter is Professor of Media and Cultural Theory at the Institute for Media and Communications, Alpen-Adria-Universitaet in Klagenfurt on Lake Woerther (Austria) and Honorary Professor at University of International Business and Economics in Beijing. His background is in sociology, psychology and philosophy. He is the (co-)author and (co-)editor of more than 30 books, including: Research Handbook on Critical Theory (2021), Handbuch Filmsoziologie. Three Volumes (2020), Film als Kunst (2020), (Mis)Understanding Political Participation. Digital Practices, New Forms of Participation and the Renewal of Democracy (2018),  Handbuch Mediensoziologie (2018), Enigma Agency (2018), Die Kunst des Eigensinns. Cultural  Studies als Kritik der Macht (2017, Second Edition), Der produktive Zuschauer. Medienaneignung als kultureller und ästhetischer Prozess (2010, Second Edition) and Global America? The Cultural Consequences of Globalization (2003).

 
Ryan Bishop Book Reviews Editor

Ryan Bishop
Book Reviews Editor

Ryan Bishop teaches at the Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton, UK, where he co-directs the research group Archaeologies of Media and Technology with Jussi Parikka. He has published on critical theory, aesthetics, military technology, urbanisim and visual/literary culture. His most recent books include Technocrats of the Imagination: Art, Technology, and the Military-Industrial Avant-Garde (2020, with John Beck, Duke UP), Seeing Degree Zero: Barthes/Burgin and Political Aesthetics (2020, with Sunil Manghani, Edinburgh UP) and Cold War Legacies: Systems, Theory, Aesthetics (2016, with John Beck, Edinburgh UP). He is co-editor of the book series “A Cultural Politics Book” (Duke UP) and “Technicities” (Edinburgh UP).

 
Scott M. Lash Special Issues Editor

Scott M. Lash
Special Issues Editor

Scott Lash is Research Affiliate at COMPAS and the School of Anthropology at Oxford University and Visiting Professor at the Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing.  He taught at Lancaster University 1977-1998 and was founding Director of the Centre for Cultural Studies at Goldsmiths. His books (some co-authored) include The End of Organized Capitalism (1987), Sociology of Postmodernism (1990), Economies of Signs and Space (1994), Reflexive Modernization (1994), Critique of Information (2002) and Global Culture Industry (2007),  China Constructing Capitalism: Economic Life and Urban Change (2014) and Experience: New Foundations for the Human Sciences (2018). He is co-editor of forthcoming TCS Special Issue Against Ontology: François Jullien and Chinese Thought and is writing a new book on infrastructure-power in China. 

 
John W.P. Phillips Standard Issues Editor

John W.P. Phillips
Standard Issues Editor

John Phillips teaches at the National University of Singapore. He is Chair of the Executive Committee of the Association for Philosophy and Literature. He writes on critical theory, literature, media, philosophy, psychoanalysis, science, society, and technology. Publications include Modernist Avant-Garde Aesthetics and Contemporary Military Technology (with Ryan Bishop) and the edited volume, Derrida Now (Polity). He is currently completing a book on Jacques Derrida and philosophy and has just completed a book on the significance of the dawn at the end of the world.


Global Public Life Coordinator
Matthias Wieser

Global Public Life Associates
Ryan Bishop
Pier Paolo Motta
Elena Pilipets
Monica Sassatelli
Tomoko Tamari

Editorial Researchers
Pier Paolo Motta
Elena Pilipets

 

Editorial Board

David Beer (University of York)

Ryan Bishop (Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton)

Lisa Blackman (Goldsmiths, University of London)

Josef Bleicher

Roger Burrows (Newcastle University)

Stuart Elden (University of Warwick)

Mike Featherstone (Goldsmiths, University of London)

Nicholas Gane (University of Warwick)

Rosalind Gill (City, University of London)

Thomas M. Kemple (University of British Columbia)

Scott M. Lash (University of Oxford)

Adrian Mackenzie (Australian National University)

Sunil Manghani (University of Southampton)

Achille Mbembe (Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of the Witwatersrand)

John W.P. Phillips (National University of Singapore)

Rob Shields (University of Alberta)

Tiziana Terranova (Università degli Studi di Napoli L’Orientale)

Rainer Winter (Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt)

Associate Editors

Ien Ang (University of Western Sydney)

Antonio A. Arantes (Campinas University)

Margaret Archer (University of Warwick)

John Armitage (Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton)

Evgenia Blagoeva (New Bulgaria University)

Rosi Braidotti (State University of Utrecht)

Rosalind Brunt (Sheffield Hallam University)

David Chaney (University of Durham)

Ira Cohen (Rutgers University)

Mitchell Dean (Copenhagen Business School)

Klaus Eder (Humboldt University, Berlin/European University Institute, Florence)

Nancy Fraser (New School University)

Jonathan Friedman (Lund University)

Andrew Gamble (University of Sheffield)

Axel Honneth (J.W. Goethe University Frankfurt)

Huimin Jin (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences)

Douglas Kellner (UCLA)

Richard Kilminster (University of Leeds)

Michele Lamont (Harvard University)

Jorge Larrain (University of Birmingham)

George Marcus (University of California, Irvine)

Stephen Mennell (University College, Dublin)

Carlo Mongardini (University of Rome, La Sapienza)

Makio Morikawa (Doshisha University, Kyoto)

Chris Rojek (City, University of London)

Richard Shusterman (Florida Atlantic University)

Barry Smart (University of Portsmouth)

Carol Smart (University of Manchester)

Georg Stauth (Bielefeld University)

Nico Stehr (Zeppelin University, Friedrichshafen)

Alan Tomlinson (University of Brighton)

John Tomlinson (Nottingham Trent University)

Shuichi Wada (Waseda University, Tokyo)

Rod Watson (University of Manchester)

Elizabeth Wilson (London Metropolitan University)

Shunya Yoshimi (University of Tokyo)