Simon Williams (sociologist)

Simon J. Williams, FAcSS (born 1961) is a British sociologist. He is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Warwick.[1]

Simon J. Williams

Born1961 (age 58–59)
NationalityBritish
Academic background
Alma materRoyal Holloway
ThesisThe consequences of chronic respiratory illness: a sociological study (1990)
Academic work
InstitutionsUniversity of Warwick
Main interestsSociology

Biography

Simon Williams completed his doctoral thesis on the sociological dimensions of chronic respiratory illness and disability in 1990 at Royal Holloway and Bedford New College, University of London. He then worked as a Research Fellow at the University of Kent in the Centre for Health Services Studies from 1990-1992 before moving to a full-time lectureship in Sociology at the University of Warwick in 1992, where he has been ever since, becoming a full Professor of Sociology in 2006 and Emeritus Professor in October 2019.

Research

Williams' has researched a wide range of sociological topics and interdisciplinary issues during his career, including the body, emotion/affect, health and illness, pain, sleep, pharmaceuticals, and most recently the social shaping/social implications of neuroscience, with particular reference to issues of cognitive enhancement.[1] He also has newly emerging research interests in new digital health technologies, and the challenges of complexity in the social sciences today.

The sociology and politics of sleep

Perhaps the most innovative aspect of Williams' work to date has been his contribution to the newly emerging sociology of sleep: a topic which until quite recently has received relatively little attention within sociology or the social sciences and humanities in general. His book Sleep and Society,[2] for example, may be read as an early attempt to sketch the sociological dimensions and dynamics of sleep, including socio-cultural and historical variability in how, when, where and with whom we sleep; changing ideas, meanings and values associated with sleep through time, culture and context; the contested nature and status of sleep rights and sleep roles in the 24/7 society; the embodied and embedded nature of sleep in everyday/night life; the social patterning and social organisation of sleep; and the medicalisation of sleep. Further collaborative research has also been conducted on the social construction of sleep in the news, and sleep deprivation as a hidden dimension of domestic violence.[2]

His latest book, The Politics of Sleep,[3] examines the increasingly 'politicised' nature of sleep today as a matter of controversy, contestation and concern, thereby linking sleep to prevailing socio-political discourses and debates concerning rights, risks and responsibilities in the late modern age and associated questions of citizenship, enterprise and enhancement in neo-liberal times. Sleep indeed, Williams argues, is another vital part of the 'politics of life' and the 'governance of bodies' today.

The social sciences and humanities too, Williams suggests, are implicated in these very processes and dynamics, thereby further profiling, promoting or problematising and hence politicising sleep, both inside and outside the academy, the laboratory and the clinic. This for example, includes recent sociological research on: gender, sleep and the life course; the social and health patterning of sleep quality and duration, and; the medicalisation of sleep. Comparative historical and cross-cultural research is also now shedding further valuable new light on a range of sleep-related matters such as the transformation of sleep science; sleep in (pre)industrial times, and; sleep and night-time in Asia and the West.[3]

All in all this adds up to a rich and vibrant new interdisciplinary area of research on 'sleep, culture and society' that complements and extends existing work in sleep science, sleep medicine and cognate fields of inquiry.

These issues have recently been further discussed and debated online in 'Somatosphere'[4] with the American medical anthropologist Matthew Wolf-Meyer.

Honours

In September 2014, Williams was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences.[5]

Selected bibliography

Books

  • Williams, Simon J. (1993). Chronic respiratory illness. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780203392560.
  • Williams, Simon J.; Calnan, Michael (1996). Modern medicine: lay perspectives and experiences. London: UCL Press. ISBN 9781857283181.
  • Williams, Simon J.; Bendelow, Gillian (1998). Emotions in social life critical themes and contemporary issues. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780203437452.
  • Williams, Simon J.; Bendelow, Gillian (1998). The lived body. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780203025680.
  • Williams, Simon J.; Calnan, Michael; Gabe, Jonathan (2000). Health, medicine and society. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780203463611.
  • Williams, Simon J. (2001). Emotion and social theory: corporeal reflections on the (ir)rational. London Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications. ISBN 9781280369506.
  • Williams, Simon J.; Bendelow, Gillian; Carpenter, Mick; Vautier, Caroline (2002). Gender, health, and healing: the public/private divide. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780203996751.
  • Williams, Simon J.; Bendelow, Gillian; Birke, Lynda I.A. (2003). Debating biology: sociological reflections on health, medicine, and society. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780203987681.
  • Williams, Simon J. (2003). Medicine and the body. London Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications. ISBN 9781446217795.
  • Williams, Simon J. (2005). Sleep and society: sociological ventures into the (un)known. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780415354189.
  • Williams, Simon J.; Gabe, Jonathan; Davis, Peter (2009). Pharmaceuticals and society: critical discourses and debates. Chichester, UK Malden, Massachusetts: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 9781405190848.
  • Williams, Simon J. (2011). The politics of sleep: governing (un)consciousness in the late modern age. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9780230223677. Preview.
  • Meloni, M, Williams, S.J. and Martin P. (eds) (2016) Biosocial Matters: Rethinking Sociology-Biology Relations in the Twenty-First Century. Oxford: Wiley.Blackwell.

Articles

gollark: I am not, however, forced to work all the time, and if I work I get a significant cut of the reward for this, unlike a slave.
gollark: I mean, broadly speaking, I'm at least... strongly incentivized... to do work (when I'm at the societally approved™ age for this).
gollark: This is not how slavery works.
gollark: I don't really have very strong emotional response to statues like that, but this is perhaps because nothing very bad like that has never actually happened to me. Although some things did happen to my ancestors.
gollark: I might, but this is irrelevant.

References

  1. "Simon J. Williams". University of Warwick. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  2. Williams, Simon J. (2005). Sleep and society: sociological ventures into the (un)known. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780415354189.
  3. Williams, Simon J. (2011). The politics of sleep: governing (un)consciousness in the late modern age. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9780230223677.
  4. "Somatosphere". somatosphere.net. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  5. "CONFERMENT OF NEW FELLOWS" (pdf). Academy of Social Sciences. September 2014. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
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