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Charles Horton Cooley - Imagining Social Reality (Hardcover)
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Charles Horton Cooley - Imagining Social Reality (Hardcover)
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An intellectual biography of a preeminent American sociologist One
of the founders of sociology in the United States, Charles Horton
Cooley (1864-1929) is perhaps best known for his concepts of the
looking-glass self and the primary group. But according to Glenn
Jacobs, he also deserves to be remembered as the first scholar of
his generation to develop a viable concept of the social
Characterizing Cooley as an ""exceptional exceptionalist,"" Jacobs
shows how his unique adaptation of Adam Smith's liberalism and his
rejection of Herbert Spencer resulted in a notion of the social
that set him apart from the burgeoning professional social science
movements of his time. In surveying Cooley's thought, Jacobs
emphasizes the role that the sociologist's own ""inner work""
played in the development of his idea of the self. Particularly
important in this respect was Cooley's deep commitment to the essay
tradition, a literary genre distinguished by autobiographical
reflection and conversational discourse that he described as ""a
society of men speaking to each other across the ages."" A close
reading of the journal that Cooley kept for over forty years
reveals how be worked out many of his key concepts and theories in
his personal writing. It was through this exercise that he
developed his distinct literary-aesthetic perspective, eventually
resulting in a methodology that stands out for setting qualitative
sociology on an epistemological foundation. In a chapter devoted to
Cooley's qualitative approach, Jacobs analyzes his vivid
ethnographic observations of the Lower East Side Jewish ghetto and
Hull House in Chicago, as well as his reflections on the death of
his daughter and his own impending death in 1929. Another chapter
looks at Cooley's little-known writing on economic sociology,
focusing on his understanding of the market as an institution. By
examining the full range of Charles Horton Cooley's contributions
to belles letters as well as social science, often allowing him to
speak for himself, Jacobs makes a strong case for elevating
Cooley's rank among the most influential American sociologists.
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