ABSTRACT

This is an exhilarating book, written by one of sociology’s most imaginative theorists and critics. Professor Corrigan proceeds by turning old answers into new questions. He draws on a rich tradition of thought from sociology, philosophy, structuralism, post-structuralism, and literary criticism to explore major ongoing problems in everyday life: moral regulation, schooling, the capitalist world economy, intellectuals, and the problem of difference, masculinity. The result is one of the most dazzling contributions to critical sociology published in recent years.

part |12 pages

Part One

part Two|226 pages

Essays: The Sociology of a Subject

chapter Chapter Three|28 pages

On Moral Regulation: Some Preliminary Remarks* (1980)

chapter Chapter Five|30 pages

In/Forming Schooling 1 (1983)

part |28 pages

Part Four