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Structural Lie
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Structural Lie

Small Clues to Global Things

Structural Lie

Small Clues to Global Things

ByCharles C. Lemert
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2011
eBook Published 22 December 2015
Pub. location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9781315631875
Pages 256 pages
eBook ISBN 9781317251347
SubjectsSocial Sciences
Get Citation

Get Citation

Lemert, C. (2011). Structural Lie. New York: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315631875
ABOUT THIS BOOK

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.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction: Clues, Lies, Global Structures
View abstract
chapter 1|17 pages
One
View abstract
chapter 2|23 pages
Two
View abstract
chapter 3|27 pages
Three
ByAlvin W. Gouldner and Post-Marxist Critical eory (with Paul Piccone)
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
Four
View abstract
chapter 5|17 pages
Five
View abstract
chapter 6|27 pages
Six
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Seven
ByBetty Friedan and Simone de Beauvoir
View abstract
chapter 8|16 pages
Eight
BySaid and “Edward”
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Nine
ByNiebuhr, Derrida, and Death Zygmunt Bauman: Liquid Waste, Being Human, and Bodily
View abstract
chapter 10|37 pages
Ten
View 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.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction: Clues, Lies, Global Structures
View abstract
chapter 1|17 pages
One
View abstract
chapter 2|23 pages
Two
View abstract
chapter 3|27 pages
Three
ByAlvin W. Gouldner and Post-Marxist Critical eory (with Paul Piccone)
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
Four
View abstract
chapter 5|17 pages
Five
View abstract
chapter 6|27 pages
Six
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Seven
ByBetty Friedan and Simone de Beauvoir
View abstract
chapter 8|16 pages
Eight
BySaid and “Edward”
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Nine
ByNiebuhr, Derrida, and Death Zygmunt Bauman: Liquid Waste, Being Human, and Bodily
View abstract
chapter 10|37 pages
Ten
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

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.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction: Clues, Lies, Global Structures
View abstract
chapter 1|17 pages
One
View abstract
chapter 2|23 pages
Two
View abstract
chapter 3|27 pages
Three
ByAlvin W. Gouldner and Post-Marxist Critical eory (with Paul Piccone)
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
Four
View abstract
chapter 5|17 pages
Five
View abstract
chapter 6|27 pages
Six
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Seven
ByBetty Friedan and Simone de Beauvoir
View abstract
chapter 8|16 pages
Eight
BySaid and “Edward”
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Nine
ByNiebuhr, Derrida, and Death Zygmunt Bauman: Liquid Waste, Being Human, and Bodily
View abstract
chapter 10|37 pages
Ten
View 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.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction: Clues, Lies, Global Structures
View abstract
chapter 1|17 pages
One
View abstract
chapter 2|23 pages
Two
View abstract
chapter 3|27 pages
Three
ByAlvin W. Gouldner and Post-Marxist Critical eory (with Paul Piccone)
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
Four
View abstract
chapter 5|17 pages
Five
View abstract
chapter 6|27 pages
Six
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Seven
ByBetty Friedan and Simone de Beauvoir
View abstract
chapter 8|16 pages
Eight
BySaid and “Edward”
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Nine
ByNiebuhr, Derrida, and Death Zygmunt Bauman: Liquid Waste, Being Human, and Bodily
View abstract
chapter 10|37 pages
Ten
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

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.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction: Clues, Lies, Global Structures
View abstract
chapter 1|17 pages
One
View abstract
chapter 2|23 pages
Two
View abstract
chapter 3|27 pages
Three
ByAlvin W. Gouldner and Post-Marxist Critical eory (with Paul Piccone)
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
Four
View abstract
chapter 5|17 pages
Five
View abstract
chapter 6|27 pages
Six
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Seven
ByBetty Friedan and Simone de Beauvoir
View abstract
chapter 8|16 pages
Eight
BySaid and “Edward”
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Nine
ByNiebuhr, Derrida, and Death Zygmunt Bauman: Liquid Waste, Being Human, and Bodily
View abstract
chapter 10|37 pages
Ten
View 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.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction: Clues, Lies, Global Structures
View abstract
chapter 1|17 pages
One
View abstract
chapter 2|23 pages
Two
View abstract
chapter 3|27 pages
Three
ByAlvin W. Gouldner and Post-Marxist Critical eory (with Paul Piccone)
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
Four
View abstract
chapter 5|17 pages
Five
View abstract
chapter 6|27 pages
Six
View abstract
chapter 7|16 pages
Seven
ByBetty Friedan and Simone de Beauvoir
View abstract
chapter 8|16 pages
Eight
BySaid and “Edward”
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Nine
ByNiebuhr, Derrida, and Death Zygmunt Bauman: Liquid Waste, Being Human, and Bodily
View abstract
chapter 10|37 pages
Ten
View abstract
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