“…Cultural sociologists largely inquire into the production of ideologies and symbols within a collectively shared space such as a social setting, environment, institutional context, or discursive field (Becker, 1982;Bourdieu, 1977Bourdieu, , 1984Bourdieu, , 1992aBourdieu, , 1992bFine, 1979;Hirsch, 1986;Katzenstein, 1995;Lamont and Molnar, 2002;Lamont and Wuthnow, 1990;Mohr, 1998;Mohr and Lee, 2000;Peterson and Anand, 2004;Spillman, 1995;Wuthnow, 1987Wuthnow, , 1989Wuthnow and Witten, 1988). Organizational theorists, on the other hand, are more concerned with how social actors organize their everyday activities amid institutional and structural constraints (Abrahamson, 1997;Abrahamson and Fombrun, 1992;Abrahamson and Fairchild, 1999;Barley and Kunda, 1992;DiMaggio and Powell, 1983;Guillén, 1994;Hoffman, 2001;Mohr and Duquenne, 1997;Powell and DiMaggio, 1991;Shenhav, 1999;Star, 1989;Star and Griesemer, 1989).…”