This new volume of the SAGE Social Thinkers series provides a concise introduction to the work, life, and influences of Émile Durkheim, one of the informal ‚holy trinity‘ of sociology’s founding thinkers, along with Weber and Marx. The author shows that Durkheim’s perspective is arguably the most properly sociological of the three. He thought through the nature of society, culture, and the complex relationship of the individual to the collective in a manner more concentrated and thorough than any of his contemporaries during the period when sociology was emerging as a discipline.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1. David Emile Durkheim, Life and Times
Chapter 2. Moral Solidarity and the New Social Science: Durkheim′s Study of the Individual in Society and Society in the Individual
Chapter 3. Morality, Law, the State and Politics
Chapter 4. Establishing a Social Science
Chapter 5. Education as Social Science and Cultural Politics
Chapter 6. The ‚Revelation‘ of Religion
Chapter 7. Unfinished Business: La Morale, the Family, and the War
Chapter 8. Further Readings
Über den Autor
Alexander Riley has written a good deal on Durkheim and from a fundamentally Durkheimian perspective on various topics over the past 15 years. These writings include his doctoral thesis at the University of California, San Diego (“In Pursuit of the Sacred: The Durkheimian Sociologists of Religion and the Modern Intellectual”) and several of his books (Godless Intellectuals? The Intellectual Pursuit of the Sacred Reinvented; Impure Play: Sacredness, Transgression, and the Tragic in Popular Culture; and the forthcoming Angel Patriots in the Sky: The Crash of United Flight 93 and the Myth of America). He is spending the academic year 2013 through 2014 in Paris on a Fulbright Research Grant, along with his wife, Esmeralda; their daughter, Valeria; and the family cat.