Jan A. Fuhse, Senior Lecturer (Privatdozent), Humboldt University of Berlin Jan A. Fuhse is interim professor in sociology at Technical University Chemnitz, Germany, and a senior lecturer (Privatdozent) at Humboldt University. After his PhD in sociology from Universität Stuttgart (Germany) in 2007, he completed a post-doc (funded by the Alexander von Humboldt foundation) at Columbia University 2007-2008. There he worked with Harrison White and Charles Tilly on the theory of social networks. From 2009 to 2013 he was an assistant professor of political sociology at the University of Bielefeld, completing his Habilitation in 2011. From 2013 to 2018, Fuhse worked as a Heisenberg Fellow (funded by the German Research Association) at Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany. From 2019 to 2021, he filled interim professorships in sociology and communication studies at the Universities of Passau and Bremen.
""Jan Fuhse, the leading network theorist in Germany, lays out a theory of social networks that does justice to its cultural and communicative basis. With clarity and a remarkable breadth of view, he unites different forms of networks under a general theory. This masterful book brings insights from systems theory, culture, and philosophical anthropology to the study of social networks. This long-awaited statement will be the starting point for the next generation of network researchers."" -- John Levi Martin, University of Chicago, and author of Social Structures ""Arguing against the conception of networks as stable and unproblematic patterns of relations, Jan Fuhse roots social networks in communication processes and dynamically evolving bundles of interpersonal expectations. This important work, indispensable for advancing network theory, provides deep reflection and a powerful lens for examining contexts ranging from migrant cultures to love as a relationship frame."" -- Ronald Breiger, Regents Professor, University of Arizona ""Social Networks of Meaning and Communication offers readers a theory of meaningful, informal social networks, enacted through communication. In this book, scholars of culture will find the truly relational account of meaning they've wanted for decades. Fuhse has written a brilliant reference work, theoretical treatise, and measurement manualDLall while engaging interesting and clear empirical data to illuminate the work."" -- Jennifer C. Lena, Columbia University, and co-author of Measuring Culture