ABSTRACT

In the eloquent style for which he has become famous, Charles Lemert writes of social theory as no one else. Thinking the Unthinkable is offered as text for instruction, yet it defies the prevailing assumption that social theory is a method for clarifying the facts of social life. Lemert shows how social theory began late in the 19th century as a struggle to come to terms with the failure of modern reason to solve the social problems created by the capitalist world-system. Since then, social theory has developed through twists and turns to think and rethink this Unthinkable. Hence the surprising innovations of recent years-postmodern, queer, postcolonial, third-wave feminist, risk theories, among others arising in the wake of globalization. Once again, Lemert has made the difficult clear in a book that students and other readers will treasure and keep.

part II|75 pages

Unthinkable Social Things

chapter 5|14 pages

Revolutionary Reasons

Karl Marx and the Melting of Solid Modernity

chapter 6|16 pages

Rationality's Double-Bind

Max Weber and Modernity's Threat to the Human Spirit

chapter 7|25 pages

The Reasonable Hope of a Social Bond

Émile Durkheim and Modern Man's Trouble with Conflict

chapter 8|8 pages

Perverse Reasons

Sigmund Freud and the Discontents of Conscious Life

chapter 9|6 pages

Unreasonable Differences

Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Logic of the Feminist Standpoint

part III|61 pages

The Exiled Others Think the Unthinkable

chapter 10|6 pages

Beyond the Double-Bind

W. E. B. Du Bois and the Gift of Second-Sight

chapter 11|7 pages

A Revolutionary Social Bond

Anna Julia Cooper and the Colored Woman's Office

chapter 12|10 pages

The Strange Social Benefits of Conflict

Georg Simmel and Modern Wandering

chapter 13|17 pages

The Social Structure of Meanings

Ferdinand de Saussure and the Arbitrary Sign