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In his final work, Donald N. Levine, one of the great
late-twentieth-century sociological theorists, brings together
diverse social thinkers. Simmel, Weber, Durkheim, Parsons, and
Merton are set into a dialogue with philosophers such as Hobbes,
Smith, Montesquieu, Comte, Kant, and Hegel and pragmatists such as
Peirce, James, Dewey, and McKeon to describe and analyze dialogical
social theory. This volume is one of Levine's most important
contributions to social theory and a worthy summation of his life's
work. Levine demonstrates that approaching social theory with a
cooperative, peaceful dialogue is a superior tactic in theorizing
about society. He illustrates the advantages of the dialogical
model with case studies drawn from the French Philosophes, the
Russian Intelligentsia, Freudian psychology, Ushiba's aikido, and
Levine's own ethnographic work in Ethiopia. Incorporating themes
that run through his lifetime's work, such as conflict resolution,
ambiguity, and varying forms of social knowledge, Levine suggests
that while dialogue is an important basis for sociological
theorizing, it still vies with more combative forms of discourse
that lend themselves to controversy rather than cooperation, often
giving theory a sense of standing still as the world moves forward.
The book was nearly finished when Levine died in April 2015, but it
has been brought to thoughtful and thought-provoking completion by
his friend and colleague Howard G. Schneiderman. This volume will
be of great interest to students and teachers of social theory and
philosophy.
In this unprecedented collection, Donald N. Levine rejuvenates the
field of social theory in the face of lagging institutional
support. The work canvasses the universe of types of theory work in
sociology and offers probing examples from his array of scholarly
investigations. Social Theory as a Vocation throws fresh light on
the texts of classic authors (Comte, Durkheim, Simmel, Weber, Park,
Parsons, and Merton). Ranging widely, its substantive chapters deal
with the sociology of strangers and the somatic dimensions of
social conflict; the social functions of ambiguity and the use of
metaphors in science; contemporary dilemmas of Ethiopian society;
logical tensions in the ideas of freedom and reason; and the
meaning of nationhood in our global era. The book includes Levine's
transformative analysis of the field of Ethiopian studies, and his
acclaimed interpretation of the discontents of modernity. It makes
the bold move to merge philosophically informed analyses with
empirical work. Finally, Levine focuses on what he views as the
contemporary crisis of liberal education, and offers suggestions
for ways to stimulate new efforts in teaching and learning to do
social theory. This book is an integral contribution to social
science collections and should be read by all interested in the
future of the social sciences.
In this unprecedented collection, Donald N. Levine rejuvenates
the field of social theory in the face of lagging institutional
support. The work canvasses the universe of types of theory work in
sociology and offers probing examples from his array of scholarly
investigations.
Social Theory as a Vocation throws fresh light on the texts of
classic authors (Comte, Durkheim, Simmel, Weber, Park, Parsons, and
Merton). Ranging widely, its substantive chapters deal with the
sociology of strangers and the somatic dimensions of social
conflict; the social functions of ambiguity and the use of
metaphors in science; contemporary dilemmas of Ethiopian society;
logical tensions in the ideas of freedom and reason; and the
meaning of nationhood in our global era. The book includes Levine's
transformative analysis of the field of Ethiopian studies, and his
acclaimed interpretation of the discontents of modernity. It makes
the bold move to merge philosophically informed analyses with
empirical work.
Finally, Levine focuses on what he views as the contemporary
crisis of liberal education, and offers suggestions for ways to
stimulate new efforts in teaching and learning to do social theory.
This book is an integral contribution to social science collections
and should be read by all interested in the future of the social
sciences.
In his final work, Donald N. Levine, one of the great
late-twentieth-century sociological theorists, brings together
diverse social thinkers. Simmel, Weber, Durkheim, Parsons, and
Merton are set into a dialogue with philosophers such as Hobbes,
Smith, Montesquieu, Comte, Kant, and Hegel and pragmatists such as
Peirce, James, Dewey, and McKeon to describe and analyze dialogical
social theory. This volume is one of Levine's most important
contributions to social theory and a worthy summation of his life's
work. Levine demonstrates that approaching social theory with a
cooperative, peaceful dialogue is a superior tactic in theorizing
about society. He illustrates the advantages of the dialogical
model with case studies drawn from the French Philosophes, the
Russian Intelligentsia, Freudian psychology, Ushiba's aikido, and
Levine's own ethnographic work in Ethiopia. Incorporating themes
that run through his lifetime's work, such as conflict resolution,
ambiguity, and varying forms of social knowledge, Levine suggests
that while dialogue is an important basis for sociological
theorizing, it still vies with more combative forms of discourse
that lend themselves to controversy rather than cooperation, often
giving theory a sense of standing still as the world moves forward.
The book was nearly finished when Levine died in April 2015, but it
has been brought to thoughtful and thought-provoking completion by
his friend and colleague Howard G. Schneiderman. This volume will
be of great interest to students and teachers of social theory and
philosophy.
In Abyssinian poetry, the "wax" is the obvious meaning, the "gold"
is the hidden meaning. In "Wax and Gold," Donald N. Levine explores
mid-to-late-twentieth-century Ethiopian society on the same two
levels, using modern sociology and psychology to seek answers to
the following questions: What is the nature of the traditional
culture of the dominant ethnic group, the Amhara, and what are its
enduring values? What aspects of modern culture interest this
society and by what means has it sought to institutionalize them?
How has tradition both facilitated and hampered Ethiopian efforts
to modernize? Enriched by the use of Ethiopian literature and by
Levine's deep knowledge of and affection for the society of which
he writes, "Wax and Gold" is both a scholarly and a personal work.
"Of those who created the intellectual capital used to launch the
enterprise of professional sociology, Georg Simmel was perhaps the
most original and fecund. In search of a subject matter for
sociology that would distinguish it from all other social sciences
and humanistic disciplines, he charted a new field for discovery
and proceeded to explore a world of novel topics in works that have
guided and anticipated the thinking of generations of sociologists.
Such distinctive concepts of contemporary sociology as social
distance, marginality, urbanism as a way of life, role-playing,
social behavior as exchange, conflict as an integrating process,
dyadic encounter, circular interaction, reference groups as
perspectives, and sociological ambivalence embody ideas which
Simmel adumbrated more than six decades ago."--Donald N. Levine
Half of the material included in this edition of Simmel's writings
represents new translations. This includes Simmel's important,
lengthy, and previously untranslated "Group Expansion and
Development of Individuality," as well as three selections from his
most neglected work, "Philosophy of Money"; in addition, the
introduction to "Probleme der Geschichtsphilosophie," chapter one
of the "Lebensanschauung," and three essays are translated for the
first time.
It is one thing to lament the financial pressures put on
universities, quite another to face up to the poverty of resources
for thinking about what universities should do when they purport to
offer a liberal education. In "Powers of the Mind," former
University of Chicago dean Donald N. Levine enriches those
resources by proposing fresh ways to think about liberal learning
with ideas more suited to our times. He does so by defining basic
values of modernity and then considering curricular principles
pertinent to them. The principles he favors are powers of the
mind--disciplines understood as fields of study defined not by
subject matter but by their embodiment of distinct intellectual
capacities. To illustrate, Levine draws on his own lifetime of
teaching and educational leadership, while providing an
inspirational summary of exemplary educational thinkers at the
University of Chicago who continue to inspire. Out of this vital
tradition, "Powers of the Mind" constructs a paradigm for liberal
arts today, inclusive of a wide range of perspectives and
applicable to the unique settings of the modern world.
The essays turn about a single theme, the loss of the capacity to
deal constructively with ambiguity in the modern era. Levine offers
a head-on critique of the modern compulsion to flee ambiguity. He
centers his analysis on the question of what responses social
scientists should adopt in the face of the inexorably ambiguous
character of all natural languages. In the course of his argument,
Levine presents a fresh reading of works by the classic figures of
modern European and American social theory--Durkheim, Freud, Simmel
and Weber, and Park, Parsons, and Merton.
Don Levine moves from the origins of systematic knowledge in
ancient Greece to the present day to present an account that is at
once a history of the social science enterprise and an introduction
to the cornerstone works of Western social thought.
"Visions" has three meanings, each of which corresponds to a part
of the book. In Part 1, Levine presents the ways previous
sociologists have rendered accounts of their discipline, as a
series of narratives--or "life stories"--that build upon each
other, generation to generation, a succession of efforts to
envisage a coherent past for the sake of a purposive present.
In Part 2, the heart of the book, Levine offers his own narrative,
reconnecting centuries of voices into a richly textured dialogue
among the varied strands of the sociological tradition: Hellenic,
British, French, German, Marxian, Italian, and American. Here, in a
tour de force of clarity and conciseness, he tracks the formation
of the sociological imagination through a series of conversations
across generations. From classic philosophy to pragmatism,
Aristotle to W. I. Thomas, Levine maps the web of visionary
statements--confrontations and oppositions--from which social
science has grown.
At the same time, this is much more than an expert synthesis of
social theory. Throughout each stage, Levine demonstrates social
knowledge has grown in response to three recurring questions: How
shall we live? What makes humans moral creatures? How do we
understand the world? He anchors the creation of social knowledge
to ethical foundations, and shows for the first time how
differences in those foundations disposed the shapers of modern
social science--among them, Marshall and Spencer, Comte and
Durkheim, Simmel and Weber, Marx and Mosca, Dewey and Park--to
proceed in vastly different ways.
In Part 3, Levine offers a vision of the contemporary scene,
setting the crisis of fragmentation in social sciences against the
fragmentation of experience and community. By reconstructing the
history of social thought as a series of fundamentally moral
engagements with common themes, he suggests new uses for
sociology's intellectual resources: not only as insight about the
nature of modernity, but also as a model of mutually respectful
communication in an increasingly fractious world.
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