New edition of the provocative history of the tenuous relationship between the scientific study of politics and the real world of American democracy.
When it first appeared three decades ago, Raymond Seidelman’s provocative study of the history of political science both attracted a great deal of attention and generated vibrant controversy. Where prior studies of the history of political science had concentrated on the evolution of the scientific study of politics, Seidelman placed his focus on the tenuous relationship between the scientific study of politics and the real world of American democracy. Examining paired sets of political science luminaries over a century, he finds recurrent hopes that a ‘science of politics’ can be a ‘science for politics, ‘ and recurrent frustrations that neither elites nor democratic publics respond to the findings of political science or defer to its claims of scientific authority. Analyzing the reasons for political science’s limited impact on democratic reform, Seidelman raises the prospect that the progressive dreams of American political science, rising and falling over the course of a century, may finally be exhausted.
For this new edition, Bruce Miroff and Stephen Skowronek have written a foreword that relates the genesis of the book and the career of the late Ray Seidelman, while James Farr, a distinguished scholar of political science history, has contributed an extensive afterword. Whether readers concur with or dispute Seidelman’s conclusions about the practical significance of political science, they will be challenged by the scope and power of Disenchanted Realists. The book invites a new generation of political scientists to examine the problematic development of the discipline they practice and to reflect on the public meanings of what they do in their own careers.
Table of Content
Foreword by Bruce Miroff and Stephen Skowronek
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. The Impulse toward a Science of Politics, 1880–1900
3. Science as Muckraking: The Cult of Realism in the Progressive Era
4. Reform and Disillusionment in the New Deal
5. The Behavioral Era
6. The Eclipse of Unity
7. Conclusion: The End of the Third Tradition
Afterword: A Science of Politics, A Science for Politics by James Farr
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the author
Raymond Seidelman is Professor of Political Science at Sarah Lawrence College. He has written extensively on the Italian Communist Party and is presently researching economic planning in the United States.