Synopses & Reviews
Important ideas that helped shape 20th-century thoughtideas which continue to hold great significance for anyone interested in the social worldare made accessible in this illuminating volume. Readers will be motivated to delve into the deeper pool of knowledge available on major social theorists and their groundbreaking ideas.
Important ideas that helped shape 20th-century thoughtideas which continue to hold great significance for anyone interested in the social worldare made accessible in this illuminating volume. Readers will be motivated to delve into the deeper pool of knowledge available on major social theorists and their groundbreaking ideas.
A mixture of biographical and historical ideas, this book was written to introduce social theory to a broad audience. It looks at the intersection between the theorist as a social actor and as a reflection of his or her time. The volume's breadth makes it a useful tool for those interested in sociology and its many luminaries.
Review
[R]eaders will find nuggets of new or unfamiliar information about many contemporary theorists. The book can serve as a handy reference tool for professors and as a concise introduction to the history of modern social thought for students. Recommended. All academic levels/libraries.Choice
Review
Roger Salerno's Beyond the Enlightenment is clearly an unusual book among the various social theory texts available on the current market. He should be commended merely for taking the venture off the beaten track, and perhaps for more than just that....The general outlay of the work is an amazing 29 brief discussions of the biographical contexts, major works, and key ideas of social theorists....[t]he book will enjoy a limited but faithful adoption in social theory courses and a more circumscribed success elsewhere. It might also be a handy reference for professors who want to spice up their lectures with biographical material on a wide range of social theorists. Salerno has provided a book that is a little offbeat, but not so revolutionary that professors will have difficulty incorporating it with standard teaching practices in social theory courses.Teaching Sociology
Synopsis
Important ideas that helped shape 20th-century thought—ideas which continue to hold great significance for anyone interested in the social world—are made accessible in this illuminating volume. Readers will be motivated to delve into the deeper pool of knowledge available on major social theorists and their groundbreaking ideas.
A mixture of biographical and historical ideas, this book was written to introduce social theory to a broad audience. It looks at the intersection between the theorist as a social actor and as a reflection of his or her time. The volume's breadth makes it a useful tool for those interested in sociology and its many luminaries.
Synopsis
Important ideas that helped shape 20th-century thought--ideas which continue to hold great significance for anyone interested in the social world--are made accessible in this illuminating volume. Readers will be motivated to delve into the deeper pool of knowledge available on major social theorists and their groundbreaking ideas.
About the Author
ROGER A. SALERNO is Professor of Sociology at Pace University.
Table of Contents
Introduction
The Enlightenment and Beyond
Georg Hegel: Foundations of Modern Social Thought
Auguste Comte: The Origins of Modern European Sociology
Herbert Spencer: Survival of the Fittest
Harriet Marineau: Feminist Sociologist
Karl Marx: Capitalism and Human Exploitation
Emile Durkheim: The Eclipse of Community
Max Weber: Reason and Bureaucracy
Sigmund Freud: The Unconscious Civilization
Friedrich Nietzsche: The Will to Power
Georg Simmel: Sociologists as Outsider
W.E.B. Du Bois: The Double Consciousness of Race
Antonio Gramsci: Critique of Hegemonic Capitalism
Adorno and Horkheimer: The Frankfurt School: Critical Theory
Herbert Marcuse: Eros and Civilization
Walter Benjamin: Art and Modernity
Norbert Elias: The Civilizing Process
Simone de Beauvoir: Otherness
Hannah Arendt: Banality of Reason
Claude Levi-Strauss: Structural Anthropology
Frantz Fanon: Race and Postcolonialism
Jacques Derrida, Jacques Lacan, and Michel Foucault: Structuralism and Beyond: Poststructuralism
Talcott Parsons: The Systems Society
Erving Goffman: The Drama of the Self
Nancy Chodorow, Judith Butler, and Bell Hooks: Feminist Social Theory
Jean Baudrillard, Donna Haraway, Zygmunt Bauman: Postmodernism
Jurgen Habermas: Communicative Action
Pierre Bourdieu: Habitus
Anthony Giddens: Structuration Theory