The Vocation of Reason
Studies in Critical Theory and Social Science in the Age of Max Weber
H.T. Wilson, York University, Toronto. Edited and with a Foreword by Thomas M. Kemple, York University, Toronto
Biographical note
H.T. Wilson, Ph.D. (1968) is a Professor at York University, Toronto. His most recent works include No Ivory Tower (Voyageur,1999), Bureaucratic Representation (Brill, 2001) and Capitalism after Postmodernism (Brill, 2002). His present work addresses the impact of spatial and temporal values on social, political and economic institutions and practices.
Thomas M. Kemple, Ph.D. (1992) in Social and Political Thought, York University, Toronto. He has published on classical sociology and contemporary cultural theory, including Reading Marx Writing: Melodrama, the Market, and the 'Grundrisse' (Stanford University Press, 1995).
Thomas M. Kemple, Ph.D. (1992) in Social and Political Thought, York University, Toronto. He has published on classical sociology and contemporary cultural theory, including Reading Marx Writing: Melodrama, the Market, and the 'Grundrisse' (Stanford University Press, 1995).
Readership
For readers interested in the legacy of Max Weber and other classical sociologists, the Frankfurt School of critical social theory, the history and importance of the social sciences in the 20th century [See also Prof. Wilson's answer to this question].
Table of contents
Acknowledgements
List of Tables and Figures
Editor’s Foreword – The age of Weber, by THomas M. Kemple
Author’s Introduction – The Ambivalence of Reason: Max Weber’s Analysis of Western Modernity
PART ONE. THE LIMITS OF ‘RATIONALITY’: FROM TRADITIONAL TO CRITICAL SOCIAL THEORY
Editor’s note on Part I
I. Reading Max Weber: Critical Theory and the Limits of Sociology
II. Critical Theory in America, 1938-1978: A Case of Intellectual Innovation and its Reception
III. Critical Theory and Social Science: Episodes in a Changing Problematic from Adorno to Habermas
IV. Functional Rationality and ‘Sense of Function’: Critical Comments on an Ideological Distortion
V. Use Value and Substantive Rationality: Marx and Weber on Dichotomization in Modern Social Theory
PART TWO. RECONSTRUCTING SOCIAL SCIENCE: FROM SOCIAL THEORIZING TO REFLEXIVE PRAXIS
Editor’s note on Part II
VI. Technocracy as Late Capitalist Ideology: Between Spectre and Myth
VII. Communication, Deprivation and Mobilization: Notes on the Achievement of Communicative Action and Related Difficulties
VIII. Science, Technology, and Innovation: Reflections on Capital and Common Sense
IX. Essential Process of Modernity: A Critical Analysis of Social Science Research Practices and an Alternative
X. Time, Space and Value: Recovering the Public Sphere
Index
List of Tables and Figures
Editor’s Foreword – The age of Weber, by THomas M. Kemple
Author’s Introduction – The Ambivalence of Reason: Max Weber’s Analysis of Western Modernity
PART ONE. THE LIMITS OF ‘RATIONALITY’: FROM TRADITIONAL TO CRITICAL SOCIAL THEORY
Editor’s note on Part I
I. Reading Max Weber: Critical Theory and the Limits of Sociology
II. Critical Theory in America, 1938-1978: A Case of Intellectual Innovation and its Reception
III. Critical Theory and Social Science: Episodes in a Changing Problematic from Adorno to Habermas
IV. Functional Rationality and ‘Sense of Function’: Critical Comments on an Ideological Distortion
V. Use Value and Substantive Rationality: Marx and Weber on Dichotomization in Modern Social Theory
PART TWO. RECONSTRUCTING SOCIAL SCIENCE: FROM SOCIAL THEORIZING TO REFLEXIVE PRAXIS
Editor’s note on Part II
VI. Technocracy as Late Capitalist Ideology: Between Spectre and Myth
VII. Communication, Deprivation and Mobilization: Notes on the Achievement of Communicative Action and Related Difficulties
VIII. Science, Technology, and Innovation: Reflections on Capital and Common Sense
IX. Essential Process of Modernity: A Critical Analysis of Social Science Research Practices and an Alternative
X. Time, Space and Value: Recovering the Public Sphere
Index
€129.00$177.00
Edited by Blanca Rodríguez-Ruiz, University of Seville and Ruth Rubio-Marín, European University Institute, Florence
By comparing women’s access to suffrage in the countries that make up the European Union, i>The Struggle for Female Suffrage in Europe provides a retelling of the story of how citizenship was gradually coined in Europe from the perspective of women.
€92.00$119.00
Edited by Amado Alarcón, Universitat Rovira i Virgil, Spain and Luis Garzón, Universite Catholique de Louvain, Belgium
This book is the result of a research on migrant integration, language and social mobility in Catalonia. Drawing on the fate of three communities: Argentineans, Colombians and Moroccans, it examines the opportunities and constraints for social mobility.
El libro es el resultado de una ...
€92.00$119.00
Rabab El-Mahdi, American University, Cairo
Using Social Funds in Egypt and Bolivia as a microcosm, this book offers a critical examination of state-civil society relations and governance under the neoliberal model. Focusing specifically on the reconstruction of citizenship rights and participatory governance under this model.
€102.00$132.00
Jean Terrier, University of Münster
Taking the example of France between the Enlightenment and the Second World War and focusing especially on the connection between social theories and political projects, this book provides an original analysis of French scholarly debates on the nature of society.
€102.00$132.00
Grazyna Skapska, Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland
Drawing on the sociological theory of reflexive modernization and the doctrine of liberal democracy, this book debates the formation of postcommunist constitutionalism. Examination of Poland, in comparison with other postcommunist countries, leads to a new theory of reflexive constitutionalism.
€102.00$132.00
David Sciulli, Texas A&M University
Written for social theorists and general readers (including undergraduates), David Sciulli's book is the first to explain not only how but also why Amitai Etzioni’s publications evolved from his dissertation to Active Society and Socio-Economics to Communitarianism.
€104.00$135.00
Thomas Scheffer, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany
This book explores the working of law and lawyers down to their very details and minituae.
€94.00$122.00
Edited by Leonardo Morlino, Istituto Italiano di Scienze Umane, Florence and Gianluigi Palombella, Università di Parma and New York University
Through a reappraisal of rule of law and democracy the contributors provide for a fresh set of inquiries, from the State, consolidated and transitional democracies, to interstate, European and global scenarios. They converge in tackling empirical and normative questions, and suggest further ...
€94.00$122.00
Edited by Thomas Scheffer, Humboldt University Berlin and Jörg Niewöhner, Humboldt University Berlin
In ethnographic inquiry, comparing is fraught with difficulties, never complete and often fails. Yet it remains a strangely productive mode of working. Thick comparison develops and reflects on the production of comparability as a fruitful process in ethnographic research.
€94.00$122.00
Imtiaz Hussain, Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico
A comparative study is made of how conflict-terminating negotiations led to maiden democratic elections in Afghanistan and Iraq, pointing various thresholds out through specific chapters, invoking negotiations theories/stages to deepen interpretations, and prospecting the Bush Doctrine's future ...
- 1 of 7
- ››
No additional information