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Modern Social Theory. From Parsons to Habermas PDF

272 Pages·1992·32.975 MB·English
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IDERN SOCIAL THEORY From Parsons to Haberwzas no Sew edition IAN CRAIB of University E55cx WHEATSHEAF New York London Toronto Sydney Tokyo Singapore First published 1992 by Harvester Wheatsheaf Campus 400, Maylands Avenue Hemes Hempstead Hertfordshire, HP2 FEZ. A division of Simon & Schuster International Group © 1992 Ian Craib _ All rights reserved. No part of this publication may he reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in and form, or by any means, electronic, mec hanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission. in writing, from the publisher. Typeset in 10/12pt Ehrhardt by Keyser Composition, Colchester Printed and bound in Great Britain by Biddies Ltd, Guildford and Kings Lynn British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 0-7450-1.87-3 (hack) ISBN 0-7450-1038-1 (pack) 2345 96959493 For Benji Theory is good be! it d0e5n't prevent things from existing (Reported comment by Charcot to Freud, quoted in Roazen, P. (1970) Freud and His Followers, Allen Lane, London, p. 91.) CONTENTS Preface to the Second Edition ix PART I INTRODUCTION 1 1 Wkaz's wrong wzkh I/zeory and why we steel! need if 3 2 Curing a path through I/zejzmgle 15 PART II THEORIES OF SOCSAL ACTION 33 INTRODUCTION 35 3 Parsons: Theory is co filing system 37 I: Structuroi-func'£z'onothl5m 37 II: Noofunctioraalism and conflict theory 56 4 Rational choice theogl: 'The price of everything 69 5 Symbolic z`nzeroctiorzz'5m.° Sooz'e1§y as conversation 85 6 Socfkgl as FL .consfNrafyf Phenomenological sociology and et/znomet/zodology 97 7 Structuration fheovyf There :Qc no such .thing as sooz'e{y,' More is wok o thing as society HI PART Ill FROM ACTION TO STRUCTURE 125 INTRODUCTION 127 8 The world as a logzi'alpattern.' An introduction to sirucfurafism 131 viii Contents 9 Structuralist Marxzkm: The world as a puppet theatre . /49 10 Post-slructuralism and postmodernism: The world gone mad 177 PART IV FROM STRUCTURE OR ACTION TO STRUCTURE AND ACTION 197 INTRODUCTION 199 1 I The Frankfurt School: There must he some may of out here 203 12 j/zirgen Habermas: Back to thej'ilzlng cabinet 231 Conclusion- Playing with ideas 247 Index 259 PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION During one of my more irritable moments when revising this book, my wife, Fiona Grant, suggested that it must be like altering a kilt: multiple pleats have to be carefully undone and sown in again. This seemed the perfect metaphor, with the added difficulty that this particular kilt has to fit a body growing in strange directions. Some pleats have almost disappeared: conflict theory and the work of Lukacs are now small parts of larger pleats, while new pleats .... - rational choice theory and structuration theory have appeared. - Others ethnomethodology, symbolic interactionism, structuralism, structuralist Marxism, and critical theory - have been 'let out' a little, while yet others - functionalism, post-structuralism, Habermas - have required larger alterations. I do not spend as much of my time as I used to teaching social theory, but, to my delight, I found that the discussions and arguments that I had with my students ten years ago have continued in my head, taking in new material as it arrives. I hope the same is true for them. Discussions with my colleagues continue in the outside world, and I am especially grateful to David Lee, Lidia Morris, Rob Stones and Tony \Voodiwiss, f the Sociology Department at Essex Universi- Hg, for reading and commenting on various chapters. Finally, many tanks to iifarion lid be rhauer, who knitted the first edition onto disc and made my needlework a lot easier, and to the Fuller Bequest Fund, administered by the Essex Sociology Department, for financ- ing the exercise. PART I INTRODUCTION

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