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The Iron Cage - Historical Interpretation of Max Weber (Hardcover)
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The Iron Cage - Historical Interpretation of Max Weber (Hardcover)
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This major study of the father of modern sociology explores the
intimate relationship between the events of Max Weber's personal
history and the development of his thought. When it was first
published in 1970, Paul Roazen described The Iron Cage as "an
example of the history of ideas at its very best"; while Robert A.
Nisbet said that "we learn more about Weber's life in this volume
than from any other in the English language."Weber's life and work
developed in reaction to the rigidities of familial and social
structures in Imperial Germany. In his youth he was torn by
irreconcilable tensions between the Bismarckian authoritarianism of
his father and the ethical puritanism of his mother. These tensions
led to a psychic crisis when, in his thirties, he expelled his
father (who died soon thereafter) from his house. His reaction to
the collapse of the European social order before and during World
War I was no less personal and profound. It is the triumph of
Professor Mitzman's approach that he convincingly demonstrates how
the internalizing of these severe experiences led to Weber's
pessimistic vision of the future as an "iron cage" and to such
seminal ideas as the notion of charisma and the concept of the
Protestant ethic and its connection with the spirit of capitalism.
The author's thesis also serves as a vehicle for describing the
social, political, and personal plight of the European bourgeois
intellectual of Weber's generation.In synthesizing Weber's life and
thought, Arthur Mitzman has expanded and refined our understanding
of this central twentieth-century figure. As Lewis Coser writes in
the preface, until now "there has been little attempt to bring
together the work and the man, to show the ways in which Weber's
cognitive intentions, his choice of problems, were linked with the
details of his personal biography. Arthur Mitzman fills this gap
brilliantly."
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