ABSTRACT

The Structural Lie tackles one of social science's most mysterious problems. How is it possible to derive statements about the grand structures of social life from their effects in the small movements of everyday life? Prominent sociologist Charles Lemert shows how Marx and Freud provide some answers to this question. Marx derived from the commodity his picture of the capitalist system, Freud diagnosed the character of psyches from the details of dreams, slips and jokes. This wonderfully readable and engaging book lays the foundation for a new social science in an age where a microchip can convey a world of information.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Clues, Lies, Global Structures

chapter |17 pages

Lies and Life

The Other Italians

chapter |23 pages

Baudrillard's Death

End of the French Era?

chapter |27 pages

Paul Piccone (1940–2004)

Cruelty and Murder in the Academy

chapter |16 pages

Goffman's Enigma

chapter |17 pages

Harold Garfinkel

Pointing and the Truth of the Routine

chapter |27 pages

Structural Aggravations

What Cultures Do

chapter |16 pages

Said and “Edward” 1

chapter |24 pages

Niebuhr, Derrida, and Death

chapter |37 pages

Why Go to Prison?