ABSTRACT

Review essays and statements written for special occasions may reveal as much about the writer as those written about; this is the presumption undergirding this collection of thirty-five years of criticism and commentary by Irving Louis Horowitz. For this volume, he selected his comments on famous, near famous, and infamous sociologists, political scientists, and assorted literary figures in between. Taken as a whole, this volume will surprise and delight readers who are acquainted with Horowitz's other works as well as those who are interested in the people he writes about.The book covers notable social scientists, from Arendt to Zetterberg, and such major figures in between as Becker, Bell, de Jouvenel, Mills, Parsons, Solzhenitsyn, and more than eighty others who have had an effect on the contemporary social and political landscape. Each is critically examined, sometimes positively, other times negatively. Horowitz was a major figure in his own right, and his writing here displays the kind of refreshing frankness experts will expect and the general reader will appreciate.The underlying assumption behind the volume, giving its disparate parts a unified characteristic, is that together these observations on others amount to a general perspective on social science held by the author. Whether his larger ambition is accepted or disputed, there is no doubt that the volume provides a standard against which to measure the literary quality of writing in the world of professional social research.

part I|76 pages

Philosophical Antecedents to Social Theory

chapter 6|4 pages

On Power and Statecraft*

chapter 7|8 pages

Public Affairs and Private Lives*

chapter 11|6 pages

Marxian Myths and Pragmatic Dragons*

part II|128 pages

Development and Change

chapter 16|4 pages

Politics, Labor and Development*

chapter 22|6 pages

A Naive Sophisticate*

chapter 24|12 pages

Reactionary Immortality*

chapter 26|6 pages

Prophecy and Postindustrial Myths*

chapter 28|4 pages

Intellectuals and Social Change*

chapter 30|8 pages

Martyrdom and Vietnam*

chapter 32|6 pages

Multinational Parochialism*

chapter 34|6 pages

The Politics of Urban Research*

chapter 35|6 pages

Anthropological Sociology*

chapter 37|4 pages

Class, Race and Pluralism*

part III|92 pages

Ethnicity and Religiosity

chapter 39|10 pages

Liquidation or Liberation?*

chapter 40|10 pages

First Amendment Blues*

chapter 41|4 pages

Community and Polity*

chapter 42|6 pages

Bodies and Souls*

chapter 43|6 pages

Ethnicity as Experience*

chapter 44|4 pages

Documenting the Holocaust*

chapter 46|6 pages

The Politics of Genocide*

chapter 48|10 pages

The Jews and Modern Communism*

chapter 49|8 pages

Jewish Soul on Ice*

chapter 50|6 pages

Anti-Semitic Linchpins*

part IV|128 pages

Social Research as Ideology and Utopia

chapter 51|6 pages

Sociological Pragmatism*

chapter 52|4 pages

Behavioral Science as Ideology*

chapter 53|4 pages

Social Contexts of Thought*

chapter 56|4 pages

Is There an American Power Elite?*

chapter 57|4 pages

Bureaucratic Illusions*

chapter 61|4 pages

The Warring Sociologists*

chapter 64|6 pages

The Banality of Culture*

chapter 65|4 pages

An American Rorschach Test*

chapter 67|4 pages

Personal Values and Social Class*

chapter 68|4 pages

The Iconoclastic Imagination*

chapter 70|4 pages

Sociological Disinformation*

chapter 71|8 pages

A Funeral Pyre for America*

chapter 73|8 pages

Sociology for Sale*

part V|120 pages

The Ethical Foundations of Political Life

chapter 74|12 pages

Open Societies and Free Minds*

chapter 75|8 pages

Tribune of the Intelligentsia*

chapter 78|4 pages

Is a Science of Ethics Possible?*

chapter 80|6 pages

The Tragedy of Triumphalism*

chapter 81|10 pages

The Two Cultures of Policy*

chapter 87|10 pages

Knowledge and Its Values*

chapter |2 pages

About the Author