ABSTRACT

The history of sociology overwhelmingly focuses on 'the winners' from the classical 'canon' - Marx, Durkheim, and Weber - to today's most celebrated sociologists. This book strikingly demonstrates that restricting sociology in this way impoverishes it as a form of historically reflexive knowledge and obscures the processes and struggles of sociology's own making as a form of disciplinary knowledge. Sociological Amnesia focuses on singular contributions to sociology that were once considered central to the discipline but are today largely neglected. Chapters explore the work of illustrious predecessors such as Raymond Aron, Erich Fromm and G.D.H. Cole as well as examining exceptional cases of reputational revival as in the case of Norbert Elias or Gabriel Tarde. Through understanding the obstacles of recognition faced by female sociologists like Viola Klein and Olive Schreiner, and public intellectuals like Cornelius Castoriadis, the volume considers the reasons why certain kinds of sociology are hailed as central to the discipline, whilst others are forgotten. In so doing, the collection offers fresh insights into not only the work of individual sociologists, but also into the discipline of sociology itself - its trajectories, forgotten promises, and dead ends.

chapter 1|16 pages

Sociological Amnesia

An Introduction

chapter 2|20 pages

British Sociology and Raymond Aron

chapter 3|20 pages

Two Men, Two Books, Many Disciplines

Robert N. Bellah, Clifford Geertz, and the Making of Iconic Cultural Objects

chapter 4|16 pages

Erich Fromm

Studies in Social Character

chapter 5|16 pages

From Literature to Sociology

The Shock of Celine's Literary Style and Viola Klein's Attempt to Understand It (With a Little Help from Karl Mannheim)

chapter 7|20 pages

Lucien Goldmann's Key Sociological Problems and His Critical Heritage

From the Hidden God to the Hidden Class

chapter 8|16 pages

G.D.H. Cole

Sociology, Politics, Empowerment and ‘How to be Socially Good'

chapter 9|19 pages

Social Monads, Not Social Facts

Gabriel Tarde's Tool for Sociological Analysis

chapter 10|21 pages

Alasdair MacIntyre's Lost Sociology

chapter 11|16 pages

Castoriadis and Social Theory

From Marginalization to Canonization to Re-radicalization

chapter 12|14 pages

Norbert Elias

Sociological Amnesia and ‘The Most Important Thinker You Have Never Heard Of'