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Genre hierarchy under non-fiction for X-Studies
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Social sciences are not my field at all, but aren't all of those types of cultural studies? They're all about cultures specific to given groups.

Cultural studies is an academic field grounded in critical theory and Marxist literary criticism. It generally concerns the political nature of contemporary culture, as well as its past historical precedents, conflicts, and issues. It is, to this extent, largely distinguished from cultural anthropology and ethnic studies in both objective and methodology.
That sounds like a separate field from any of the others to me. It also looks like it has separate academic departments in universities which offer it along with the other interdisciplinary fields listed.

Here's Wikipedia's list of topics
# 6 Scope and topics
* 6.1 Culture
* 6.2 Criminality, deviance, law and punishment
* 6.3 Economic sociology
* 6.4 Environment
* 6.5 Education
* 6.6 Family, gender, and sexuality
* 6.7 Health and illness
* 6.8 Internet
* 6.9 Knowledge and science
* 6.10 Media
* 6.11 Military
* 6.12 Political sociology
* 6.13 Race and ethnic relations
* 6.14 Religion
* 6.15 Social networks
* 6.16 Social psychology
* 6.17 Stratification
* 6.18 Urban and rural sociology
* 6.19 Work and industry
Any good? Family gender and culture are there anyway..

(Here's one example of an academic program:
Students who wish to complete the requirements for the undergraduate certificate in Women and Gender Studies must take [several courses, of which] at least one must be taken in each of three broad disciplinary areas: social science, humanities, and science.That doesn't fall under sociology or social science!)

One solution that I have been thinking about is to stop considering these as academic fields entirely and instead to place them with the concept studied. So, gender studies under gender, disability studies under disability, etc. That would make them harder to find from an "I'm looking for a non-fiction area of study" angle but perhaps easier to find from an "I'm looking for books related to X" angle.





Cultural Studies was probably the best suggestion. (I would ignore Wikipedia's rather specific definition of it, since Goodreads isn't attempting to be that specific or correct.)
Lobstergirl wrote: "Academic is not a subject category."
Why? Remember, we're less looking at what a formally-trained MLS would call it, and more for what will help GR users find the books they are looking for.
Why? Remember, we're less looking at what a formally-trained MLS would call it, and more for what will help GR users find the books they are looking for.

Lobstergirl wrote: "It refers more to a pedagogical or research intent in the text."
Agreed. What I don't understand is why that wouldn't apply to the genre examples Cait listed in the first post.
Agreed. What I don't understand is why that wouldn't apply to the genre examples Cait listed in the first post.

But we are attempting to sort genres which are user-created, not to create our own, so the best definition should be coming from the use of the genre shelves. All of the popular Cultural Studies books do appear to be "critical/Marxist theory concerning the political nature of contemporary culture". None of the popular Cultural Studies books overlap with any of the top books in the other -Studies genres. Of the top five books under Cultural Studies, none of those books have any of the other -Studies listed in the first page of their shelves. The people actually using a cultural-studies shelf -- the ones who presumably care the most about how it is placed with other genres -- are apparently not using it as a catch-all, and we can't make a genre mean something else just because its name is handy.

1) Let's not use the shelf 'academic' - I think that is too broad a brush, and isn't actually a genre, as someone else stated. Academic research/work is done on every possible subject, as Lobstergirl mentioned.
2) I minored in Women's Studies in university myself, and I would never even remotely think to look under a heading called 'cultural studies' - combine that with the fact that it already has an accepted definition, to me means that we should not be using it as an umbrella term for other types of work.
3) I favor Cait's idea in message 7 - place each of these with the concept studied. I think it is much more likely for those looking for it to be able to find it that way.


(There isn't a way to see a hierarchical view of all of the genres, is there?)

Not that I've noticed. That would be nice to have. I've had to look at the entire genre list and backtrack several times.
My inclination is to leave them directly under non-fiction, but Mayanka is worried that for a high-level genre it's getting too cluttered and specific. Any thoughts?