We are all modern today. But modernity today is not what it used to be. Over the past few decades, modernity has been radically changed by globalization, individualization, new inequalities, and fundamentalism. A novel way of analysing contemporary societies is needed. This book proposes such an analysis.
Every society seeks answers to certain basic questions: how to order life in common; how to satisfy human needs; how to establish knowledge. Sociology long assumed that the answers had been found once and for all: a liberal-democratic state, a market economy, and free scientific institutions. This trinity used to be called ‘modern society’.
By contrast, this book is based on the idea that, under conditions of modernity, there are no stable and certain answers to these questions. There is a plurality of possible answers, every proposed answer can be criticized and contested, and every society needs to find its answer on its own.
This new sociology of modernity proposes two key instruments through which to understand the answers given to those questions: the experiences human beings have of their own modernity and the interpretations they give to those experiences. It reviews the history of ‘Western’ modernity in this light and then focuses on the specific answers that were and are being developed in Europe.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface vii
1 Ways of Understanding Modernity 1
Part I: Interpretations of Political Modernity: Liberty and its Discontents 19
Overture: Multiple Interpretations of Political Modernity 21
2 Modernity and the Question of Freedom 24
3 The Political Forms of Modernity 39
4 Modernity as a Project of Emancipation and the Possibility of Politics 62
Part II: Interpretations of Economic Modernity: The Endgame and After 75
Overture: Capitalism and Modernity as Social Formations and as Imaginary Signifi cations 77
5 The Critique of Capitalism and its Impasse 83
6 Towards a Historical-Comparative Sociology of Capitalism 103
7 The Exit from Organized Economic Modernity 123
Part III: Interpretations of Epistemic Modernity: Distance and Involvement 143
Overture: The Quest for Knowledge beyond Experience and Interpretation 145
8 The Critique of Science and its Prospects 149
9 Varieties of Socio-political Interpretations of Modernity 165
Part IV: The European Experience and Interpretation of Modernity 189
Overture: European Integration as an Interpretation of Modernity 191
10 Logics of European History 196
11 Regionalizing European Modernity 215
Part V: The Analysis of Modernity and the Need for a New Sociology 231
Overture: When the Light of the Cultural Problems has Moved On 233
12 The Social Theory and Political Philosophy of Modernity 235
13 The Conceptual History and Historical Sociology of Modernity 247
Notes 265
References 282
Index 297
Über den Autor
Peter Wagner is ICREA Research Professor at the University of Barcelona.