The distinction between private and public realms of experience,
of social activity, and of personal identity are fundamental for
shaping everyday understanding and organization of social life, yet
the distinction has not been paramount in sociological theorizing.
Dividing Public and Private makes the public/private division
central to social theory and social inquiry. Gerald Turkel
demonstrates that by placing the public/private distinction at the
center of social thought and by rethinking the writings of such
classical theorists as Marx, Durkheim, Weber, and Parsons through
the prism of the public/private division, new dimensions are raised
for the analysis of authority, legitimacy, law, political
participation, and the very meanings of freedom and necessity.
Based on the joining of legal, social, and political theory,
Turkel argues that the public/private division is crucial for
mediating and overcoming social totalism and privatized oppression.
Dividing Public and Private challenges such theoretical approaches
as critical theory, feminism, neo-Marxism, and liberalism to affirm
the public/private division in directions that support equality,
active participation in politics and the formation of collective
projects, and individual self-determination. It is particularly
appropriate for theorists in law, political science, and
sociology.
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