Neha Patil (Editor)

Journal of Mundane Behavior

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Abbreviated title (ISO 4)
  
J. Mundane Behav.

Language
  
English

Publication history
  
2000-2004

Discipline
  
Edited by
  
Scott Schaffer

Frequency
  
Triannual

The Journal of Mundane Behavior was a peer-reviewed academic journal of sociology covering everyday behavior and experiences. It was published online with three issues a year. The journal's first issue came out in February 2000 and the last issue appeared in 2004.

The journal was dedicated to exploring "the minor, redundant and commonplace scenes of life" and celebrating "the majesty of the obvious". The first issue included articles about the behavior of Japanese people on elevators, the arrangement of books on library shelves, and the social implications of facial hair. The journal reflected a recent trend among sociologists to "investigate the largely unconscious verbal and nonverbal conventions of everyday social interactions," in contrast to the field's historical focus on deviant behavior.

The editor-in-chief was Scott Schaffer, assistant professor of sociology at Millersville University of Pennsylvania. The original concept for the journal came from Schaffer and founding co-editor Myron Orleans, sociology professor at California State University, Fullerton. They were "inspired in part by an article in the scholarly journal Sociological Theory that called for closer inspection of those parts of life that we routinely ignore." The two universities co-hosted the site.

References

Journal of Mundane Behavior Wikipedia