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Palgrave Macmillan
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Restoring the Classic in Sociology

Traditions, Texts and the Canon

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  • © 2016

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Table of contents (9 chapters)

  1. The Issue of the Classic

  2. The Wider Context: The Past, the Classic, and the Identity of Sociology

  3. Hermeneutics, Tradition, Classic and Canon

Keywords

About this book

This book demonstrates that classical sociology is essential to cutting-edge debates in the contemporary social sciences. It has become fashionable to play down the importance of the classic text in sociology and critique the ideas of Weber, Marx and Durkheim as ideologically outdated. The author mounts a strong challenge to this view, criticising such notions as de-traditionalization, structuration and postmodernism, emphasizing instead the relevance of habit, re-traditionalization, and social integration across time. Arguing that sociology has eliminated the importance of the past, history, and tradition in favour of the transience of the present, he revisits the Habermas-Gadamer debate to argue that tradition is the ground of the classic, and the classic something that must prove itself anew in subsequent situations. He uses the work of Durkheim, Simmel and Weber to illustrate this process. Making a distinction between ‘classic’ and ‘canon’ which parallels that between ‘agency’ and‘structure’, he allows the reader to appreciate the separate value of both. This major contribution to the field is essential reading for scholars and students of sociology and social theory.

Reviews

“Presenting an argument that brings many voices into the conversation while relying in particular on Hans-Georg Gadamer, the book is engaging and full of insights … . Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students/faculty.” (P. Kivisto, Choice, Vol. 54 (6), February, 2017) 

Authors and Affiliations

  • Humanities and Creative Arts, Worcester University, Worcester, United Kingdom

    Alan R. How

About the author

Alan R. How is Senior Lecturer at the University of Worcester, UK.

Bibliographic Information

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