Synopses & Reviews
Distinguished French sociologist Raymond Boudon presents here a critical theory history of the concept of ideology. His highly original and lucidly argued study addresses the core question of any account of ideology. How do individuals come to adhere to false or apparently irrational beliefs, and how do such beliefs become collectively accepted as true?
Boudon begins by providing an exhaustive and subtle critique of sociological explanations of ideology from early conceptions to its current usage in the works of Barthes, Foucault, Habermas, Sartre, and others. He then offers his own interpretation of the origins and emergence of ideological beliefs. In opposition to those views which associate ideology with irrationalism, Boudon shows that ideologies are a natural ingredient of social life; he develops a rationalist theory that helps to explain why certain ideas are believed by individuals and thereby effective in the social world. Finally, he examines case studies of two modern-day ideologies—developmentalism and Third Worldism.
Moving easily across disciplinary boundaries, Boudon's provocative contribution to a subject of growing significance will be of great interest to scholars in sociology and social theory, as well as philosophy, political science, and development studies.
About the Author
Raymond Boudon is professor of sociology at the Sorbonne. He is the author of numerous works, including, in English translation,
Theories of Social Change and
The Critical Dictionary of Sociology, the latter of which is also published by the University of Chicago Press.
Table of Contents
Preface
Prologue
1. A question (among others) on ideology
Part I
2. What is ideology?
3. Is Homo Sociologicus (always) irrational?
4. Journey around a table
Part II
5. Outline of a restricted theory of ideology
6. Ideology, social position, and dispositions
7. Ideology and communication
8. Science and ideology
Part III
9. Two case studies
Epilogue
10. Against scepticism
Notes
Index