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The Winding Passage - Sociological Essays and Journeys (Hardcover)
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The Winding Passage - Sociological Essays and Journeys (Hardcover)
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This collection brings together Daniel Bell's best work in essay
form. It deals with a variety of topics: technology and culture,
religion and personal identity, intellectuals and their societies,
and the uses and abuses of doctrines of social class. The Winding
Passage demonstrates the author's continuing concern with the
salient issues of our times, while its inspiration draws upon an
older, humanistic sociological tradition. In a central essay on
intellectuals, Bell examines the term new class and calls it a
muddle. Though the idea of class has been relevant to Western
industrial society for the past two hundred years, the concept is
less useful for examining Communist states, the Third World, and
even the emerging postindustrial sectors of the West. Bell seeks to
establish the idea of situs, the competitive conflict of functional
groups for shares in the state budgetary process. A more personal
note is struck in the final section of the book. In reflecting on
the nature of intellectual life, the special role of the Jewish
intellectual, and the tension between the claims of the parochial
and the universal, Bell uses as a general framework antinomianism,
the claims of individual conscience against authority, law, and
established institutions. And in a final statement, "The Return of
the Sacred," Bell explores the enlightenment belief in the
dissolution of religion and attempts to show why it was wrong. This
is a must book for those concerned with the sociology of knowledge,
intellectual history, and social stratification. Speaking of The
Winding Passage, Seymour Martin Lipset called the book
"sociological analysis at its best" Irving Howe noted that "Bell is
always worth listening to. He is a true intellectual." And Irving
Louis Horowitz, in his review of the book, calls it "the sifted
excellence of a civilized and urbane intellectual.
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