ABSTRACT

Sociologist Nathan Glazer's remarkably long and productive career as a New York intellectual spans seven decades from the Great Depression era to the late twentieth century. A voracious intellect with a perpetual sense of curiosity, he defies easy labelling. When Ideas Mattered is a critical volume, but it also contains autobiographical essays Glazer has written over the years to explain the evolution of his own thought.

The book is a sensitive and nuanced examination of a towering intellectual figure on the American scene. It is organized into sections corresponding to Glazer's wide ranging interests: ethnicity, race, social policy and urbanism, and architecture. He has written on the myth of the American melting pot, the nature of American communism, the perils and importance of affirmative action, and the limits of social policy. Because Glazer's work has influenced succeeding generations of thinkers and scholars in a number of fields, the editors have included appraisals and assessments by several of these writers written especially for this volume.

part I|12 pages

Introduction

chapter |10 pages

An Unreliable Man

Edited ByJoseph Dorman

part IV|27 pages

Social Policy

chapter 10|16 pages

The Limits of Social Policy (1971)

chapter 11|9 pages

Reform Work, Not Welfare (1975)

part V|45 pages

Architecture and Urbanism

part VI|60 pages

Glazer on Glazer

chapter 15|24 pages

My Life in Sociology (2012)

chapter 16|12 pages

Commentary: The Early Years (2005)

chapter 17|15 pages

On Being Deradicalized (1970)

part VII|17 pages

Glazer on Sociology

chapter 19|15 pages

Tocqueville and Riesman (2000)

part VIII|37 pages

Appraisals