ABSTRACT

Professor Margaret Archer is a leading critical realist and major contemporary social theorist. This edited collection seeks to celebrate the scope and accomplishments of her work, distilling her theoretical and empirical contributions into four sections which capture the essence and trajectory of her research over almost four decades. Long fascinated with the problem of structure and agency, Archer’s work has constituted a decade-long engagement with this perennial issue of social thought. However, in spite of the deep interconnections that unify her body of work, it is rarely treated as a coherent whole. This is doubtless in part due to the unforgiving rigour of her arguments and prose, but also a byproduct of sociology’s ongoing compartmentalisation.

This edited collection seeks to address this relative neglect by collating a selection of papers, spanning Archer’s career, which collectively elucidate both the development of her thought and the value that can be found in it as a systematic whole. This book illustrates the empirical origins of her social ontology in her early work on the sociology of education, as well as foregrounding the diverse range of influences that have conditioned her intellectual trajectory: the systems theory of Walter Buckley, the neo-Weberian analysis of Lockwood, the critical realist philosophy of Roy Bhaskar and, more recently, her engagement with American pragmatism and the Italian school of relational sociology. What emerges is a series of important contributions to our understanding of the relationship between structure, culture and agency. Acting to introduce and guide readers through these contributions, this book carries the potential to inform exciting and innovative sociological research.

chapter |21 pages

Morphogenesis

Realism’s explanatory framework

chapter |11 pages

Agency: the stratified model of people

chapter |3 pages

Notes

chapter |8 pages

1

chapter |2 pages

Notes

chapter |1 pages

Notes

chapter 3|18 pages

The myth of cultural integration*

chapter 4|25 pages

The vexatious fact of society

chapter |14 pages

Structure T2 TS

Action Structural Elaboration

chapter |2 pages

Notes

chapter |1 pages

References

chapter 11|2 pages

Morphogenic society

Self-government and self-organization as misleading metaphors

chapter 13|10 pages

How agency is transformed in the course of social transformation

Don’t forget the double morphogenesis

chapter |3 pages

Interview with Maggie

chapter |5 pages

Part 2: Educational systems

chapter |5 pages

Part 4: Structure and culture

chapter |8 pages

Structure, Culture and Agency: selected papers of Margaret Archer

Annotated bibliography