6916:the_practice_of_social_theory
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- | # The practice of social theory | ||
- | This is a difficult time to study questions of culture, development, | ||
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- | Generally speaking, the social sciences developed in the West in a period in which Western societies were very confident in their future. It had become common to assume that human history, and especially the West's own history, was a story of progress toward a better, happier, and more secure existence. For many, this lay in the progressive transformation of society itself. It was the job of social scientists to understand and explain why this transformation happens. Theories of society developed, then, in the context of a faith in modernity. Indeed, the development of a theory of society was itself often taken as an expression of this modernity. Scientific social theory was a sign that society was becoming conscious of itself and thus able to transcend its own original conditions and take command of its destiny. | ||
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- | Lately, many have voiced their fear that the liberal international order is in retreat, and progress is being reversed. For myself, I wonder if our modernity was real in the first place. While the end of the Cold War and the rise of a global system of free trade made it seem as though a liberal international order would become permanent, hysteria over immigration---often heavily inflected with xenophobia and racism---have fueled a resurgence in far-right nationalism. Even before Brexit and Trump, finding broad political consensus in democratic societies had become elusive; now it seems impossible. The present mood is one of anxiety rather than confidence. Is it possible to theorize society anymore? | ||
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- | *** | ||
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- | As social scientists, our purpose is to explain society, and to arrive at a better theory of society and culture. Development, | ||
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- | The classical social theorists Durkheim, Weber and Marx were each interested in explaining why European, industrialized, | ||
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- | Yet the history of social inquiry offers us with another way to make use of theory. In the eleventh and last of his Theses on Feuerbach, Karl Marx states: | ||
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- | > Philosophers have hitherto only interpreted the world in various ways; the point is to change it. (Marx 1972 [1845], 123) | ||
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- | Social inquiry is also a form of social practice, and it has concrete effects on the social world. We see these effects when certain conceptions of society become dominant and foreclose the possibility of alternatives. We can also use theories of society to challenge what people take for granted by raising questions which they have learned not to ask. This potential to challenge dominant ideas exists to a degree in all of the classical sociological theories. In their own ways, they each also forced people to confront "the reality of society" | ||
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- | In this regard, Marx's social theory is the most relevant to understanding our task as theorists. In his eleventh thesis, Marx emphasizes that the scholar of society can never transcend the social context in which she works. As such, she has a duty to engage with this social reality and recognize her role in changing it. If social theories are in fact expression of a society' | ||
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- | *** | ||
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- | Theories of societies are themselves products of the social conditions under which people devise them. In this sense, any one social theory occupies a particular standpoint with respect to the world which enables one to see certain kinds of patterns clearly but also hides others. Western social theories for instance often take the legacies of European history for granted. More than simply being biased and partial, though, the practice of theorizing always involves excluding other histories from considering society and social forces in the abstract. If social theory is in fact a society coming into consciousness of itself, then this also entails the production of what Du Bois calls " | ||
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- | > It is a peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness, | ||
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- | When dominant groups in society interpret the world, they necessarily change it to suit their interests; Double-consciousness, | ||
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- | ## References | ||
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- | Du Bois, W. E. B. 1903. “Of Our Spiritual Strivings.” In The Souls of Black Folk: Essays and Sketches, 1–12. Chicago: A. C. McClurg. | ||
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- | Hobsbawm, E. J. 1962. The Age of Revolution, 1789-1848. New York: New American Library. | ||
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- | Polanyi, Karl. 1947. “Our Obsolete Market Mentality.” Commentary, February 1947. | ||
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6916/the_practice_of_social_theory.1532048438.txt.gz · Last modified: 2018/07/19 18:00 by Ryan Schram (user)