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Social theory is open to many passing currents. Claims to originality tend to thrive and past achievements are often ignored. In Sociologiocal Theory: What Went Wrong? Mouzelis claims that "problems" currently being isolated are not really problems, and that "achievements" claimed are little more than pretensions. He argues that we have been premature to dismiss thinkers from the late 1950s and early 1960s and that we can build on their ideas to produce a more effective, more relevant social theory. Written with precision and with clarity, Sociological Theory: What Went Wrong? is a compelling analysis of the central problems of sociological theory today and of the means to resolve them.
Theorizing in the social sciences today is in disarray, a disarray
marked by the relative disconnection between theory and empirical
research, the subordination of sociological to philosophical
theorizing, the abolition of boundaries between social science
disciplines and subdisciplines and the conflation of the internal
logics of sociology. "Sociological Theory: What Went Wrong?" is a
compelling analysis of the central problems of sociological theory
today and the means to resolve them.
In this book, the author argues for the validity of a truly
sociological approach to social theory. To argue his case, Mouzelis
selectively appropriates certain anti-essentialist and
anti-foundationalist insights developed by poststructuralism and
other versions of modern social theory.
By examining critically a variety of developments in
Post-Parsonian theorizing, the author both attempts to provide a
diagnosis of what went wrong in the development of sociological
theory and to offer suggestions of how to overcome the present
impasse. The latter is done by the elaboration of a set of
concepts--derived mainly but not exclusively from the Marxist and
Parsonian traditions--which help us to view under a new light
on-going debates on the nature of functionalist explanations, the
agency/structure distinction, micro-macro linkages, and the social
versus sociological theory controversy.
"Sociological Theory: What Went Wrong?" will be essential reading
for all concerned with the state of theorizing in the social
sciences today.
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