Émile Durkheim remains one of the most controversial, and one of the most deeply misunderstood, classics of social theory. His work differs from the dominant version of sociology that has essentially accepted the modernist self-description of contemporary societies; and it squarely contradicts the individualism that has come to dominate the social sciences. For everybody who is interested in constructing theoretical alternatives to this individualism, Durkheim's sociology can be a highly useful inspiration - not only because of the solutions it suggests, but already because of the questions it asks. Making use of the theoretical possibilities offered by the Durkheimian tradition, however, requires going beyond the familiar appropriations.
Therefore, The Oxford Handbook of Émile Durkheim takes stock of the different recent debates on Durkheimian sociology, and makes them accessible to a wide audience spanning various disciplines; this includes crucial debates that, due to language barriers, are not easily accessible for an English-reading public. The handbook's chapters elucidate the controversial key concepts of Durkheimian sociology; situate them within the contemporary political and theoretical debates they were originally responding to; offer surveys of empirical research that uses Durkheimian concepts (on topics that were already central for Durkheim's own work as well as on topics that Durkheim hardly touched upon), thus demonstrating the possibilities of a Durkheimian sociology; bring out the divergent, and competing, ways in which Durkheim's ideas have been appropriated and reformulated within more recent theoretical developments in the social sciences. In doing so, this volume is an important resource for all scholars and students looking to understand Durkheimian sociology.
Recenzijos
This new collection of essays regarding the thought and reception of the work of Émile Durkheim is a masterful corrective to one of social science's most important, but also most misunderstood, founding figures. Too often dismissed as a strict positivist and conservative, Durkheim has been forgotten and neglected by many in recent years. This book deserves our attention because it demonstrates (from a variety of vantage points and perspectives) his relevance to our current social theoretical efforts....Highly recommended. * Choice *
1. Introduction: Some Reasons for (Re)reading Durkheim Today
Hans Joas and Andreas Pettenkofer
2. Durkheim's Signature Project: The Science of Morality as Rational Moral
Art
Mark S. Cladis
3. Solidarity and Attachment in Durkheim's Sociological Thought
Serge Paugam
4. The Sociality of Mind: Key Arguments, Inner Tensions, and Divergent
Appropriations of Durkheim's Sociology of Knowledge
Frithjof Nungesser
5. In Defense of Collective Consciousness: Reassessing Durkheim's Argument
Francesco Callegaro
6. Religious Rituals and Logical Thought in Durkheim: The Level of Existence
of Social Things
Bruno Karsenti
7. The Dreyfus Affair and Durkheim's Experience of Anti-Semitism
Pierre Birnbaum
8. Durkheim and the Philosophy of His Time
Jean-Louis Fabiani
9. Durkheim's Team: L'Année sociologique
Marcel Fournier and Paul Carls
10. Durkheim and Bergson, Durkheimians and Bergsonians
Heike Delitz
11. Durkheim, Pragmatism, and Sociology
Romain Pudal
12. Émile Durkheim's Germany
Wolf Feuerhahn
13. The Modern Individual
Willie Watts Miller
14. Durkheim and Economic Sociology
Philippe Steiner
15. Reflecting on Durkheim and His Studies on Law through Cancellations of
British Citizenship
Devyani Prabhat
16. Émile Durkheim and the Sociology of Religion
Matthias Koenig
17. Durkheim's Ambivalence towards Art
Edward Tiryakian and Josefina Cintron Tiryakian
18. Durkheim and Social Movements
Kerstin Jacobsson
19. Durkheim and the Sociology of Human-Animal Relations
Robert Seyfert
20. Durkheim and the Sociality of Space
Markus Schroer
21. Émile Durkheim and the Modern Family
Franēois de Singly
22. Durkheim, Tarde, Latour
Bjųrn Schiermer Andersen
23. Sociology of the Sacred: The Revitalization of the Durkheim School at
the Collčge de Sociologie and the Renewal of a Sociology of Sacralization by
Hans Joas
Stephan Moebius
24. Lévi-Strauss's Critique of Durkheim
Jing Xie
25. Ordinary Rituals: Durkheim, Mead, Goffman
Frédéric Keck
26. Durkheim and the New Sociology of Morality
Steven Lukes
Hans Joas is Ernst Troeltsch Professor for the Sociology of Religion at Humboldt University Berlin and Visiting Professor of Sociology and Social Thought at the University of Chicago. He received his Ph.D. from Freie Universität Berlin in 1979 (G. H. Mead: A Contemporary Re-examination of His Thought, MIT Press, 1985, 1997). Among his numerous prizes are the Max Planck Research Award in 2015; the Prix Paul Ricoeur in 2017 and the Distinguished Lifetime Achievement Award of the German Sociological Association in 2022. His last book in English is The Power of the Sacred. An Alternative to the Narrative of Disenchantment, Oxford UP, 2021.
Andreas Pettenkofer studied sociology at the Free University of Berlin, the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales and the University of Bielefeld, and received his PhD at the Max Weber Centre, University of Erfurt. After positions at the University of Göttingen and at the Fernuniversität in Hagen, he is now a fellow at the Max Weber Centre, University of Erfurt, where he heads the group "The Local Politicization of Global Norms".