Drawing on Hegel, Marx, Weber, and Durkheim, Mark Worrell re-examines the social ontology of "social facts' in the wake of the shift from bourgeois liberalism to global neoliberalism.
Drawing on Hegel, Marx, Weber, and Durkheim, Mark Worrell re-examines the social ontology of "social facts' in the wake of the shift from bourgeois liberalism to global neoliberalism.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Mark P. Worrell, Ph.D. (2003, University of Kansas), is Professor of Sociology at SUNY Cortland. Worrell has published widely in critical theoretical journals, is the author of several previous books, and serves as an Associate Editor for the journal Critical Sociology.
Inhaltsangabe
Table of Contents Preface Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Introduction: Towards a "Marxheimian" Sociology 1. Authority and Authoritarianism 2. Reason and Mediation 3. The Concept 4. The Absolute 5. Ersatz Absolutes 6. Critical and Ordinary Sociology Circle the Invisible 7. The Negative Absolute 8. Networks and Sideways Glances at Jittery Totalities 9. Marxist Association 1. The Facticity of the Social 2. Social Facts 3. The Impersonality of Facts 4. Collective Conduct 5. Collective Consciousness 6. Collective Emotions and Sentiments 7. Currents and Crystallizations 8. Externality 9. Coercion and Authority 10. Irreducibility 1. The Sociogony 2. LARD (Lack, Assemblage, Repression, and Desideration, or, Weird Nature) 3. Ebullience 4. Projection and Externalization 5. Objectification and Internalization 6. Estrangement, Fetishisitc Reversals and Inversions, or, the Problem with Straw Hats 7. Reification and Sublation 8. Alienation and Domination 9. Derealization and Desublimation, or, Treitschke in Narnia 10. A Formal Intermezzo 11. Hyper-Praxis 12. The Dynamistic Circle 13. The Inhuman Equivalent Bibliography Index
Table of Contents Preface Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Introduction: Towards a "Marxheimian" Sociology 1. Authority and Authoritarianism 2. Reason and Mediation 3. The Concept 4. The Absolute 5. Ersatz Absolutes 6. Critical and Ordinary Sociology Circle the Invisible 7. The Negative Absolute 8. Networks and Sideways Glances at Jittery Totalities 9. Marxist Association 1. The Facticity of the Social 2. Social Facts 3. The Impersonality of Facts 4. Collective Conduct 5. Collective Consciousness 6. Collective Emotions and Sentiments 7. Currents and Crystallizations 8. Externality 9. Coercion and Authority 10. Irreducibility 1. The Sociogony 2. LARD (Lack, Assemblage, Repression, and Desideration, or, Weird Nature) 3. Ebullience 4. Projection and Externalization 5. Objectification and Internalization 6. Estrangement, Fetishisitc Reversals and Inversions, or, the Problem with Straw Hats 7. Reification and Sublation 8. Alienation and Domination 9. Derealization and Desublimation, or, Treitschke in Narnia 10. A Formal Intermezzo 11. Hyper-Praxis 12. The Dynamistic Circle 13. The Inhuman Equivalent Bibliography Index
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