Description
Charles Lemert is one of the most renowned critics of social theory and theorists today. The editors of this book have offered and contextualized many of his best essays and situated them against the backdrop of American sociology.
The breadth of Lemert’s work does not stop at an academic engagement with theoretical debates such as "globalization" or "postmodernism," but cuts right to the heart of abiding social issues. His work is focused and continues to probe pressing questions such as the rise of vulnerabilities in an era of new capitalism. By weaving together personal narrative, research, lucid explanations, and a dynamic engagement with social theory of old and new, his unique prose renders accessible complex theoretical debates.
- Offers the first accessible, critical introduction to the work of Charles Lemert
- Illustrates Lemert's dedication to new sociologies for emerging social problems
- Includes a new essay from Lemert linking together social theory and politics, plus a complete bibliography of Lemert's writings
- Of interest to everybody concerned with sociology, social theory, and abiding social issues from race to contemporary culture
Author Info
Daniel Chaffee is an Associate Lecturer and PhD student at the Department of Sociology, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia.
Sam Han is Visiting Instructor of Sociology at the College of Staten Island and PhD student in Sociology at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is the author of Navigating Technomedia: Caught in the Web.
Reviews
“Editors Daniel Chaffee and Sam Han have chosen the most important of Charles Lemert's writings to show the depth and breathe of his contribution to social theory. With their richly informative introduction, Chaffee and Han make clear that Lemert's contribution to social theory comes from the critical stance he takes toward sociology, a discipline he cares about enough to be critical of it. But being critical is not merely a personal choice for Lemert. The social issues of the day simply have had a stronger hold on Lemert's imagination then mere fidelity to disciplinary knowledge. The collection of essays is perfect for scholars, teachers and students.”
–Patricia Ticineto Clough, Queens College and The Graduate Center, CUNY
“Throughout his career in sociology, Charles Lemert has made it his business to stand in the gap between 'high' theory and the political and social affairs of everyday people. In doing so, he has worked hard to ensure that theory speaks responsibly to and about modern human experiences, and that social differences pertaining (but not exclusively) to race and gender get registered not as vexing aberrations in humankind, but as core and defining elements of the social world that social theory is charged with explaining. In admirable fashion, this work reflects his efforts on this front. Serious thinkers must engage it.”
–Alford A. Young, Jr., University of Michigan
“Charles Lemert has the rare ability to make anyone who reads his work or hears him speak become interested in a whole new way of looking at the world. That is what all true scholars do. This new anthology of his outstanding work reminds us that he is the ultimate tour guide who makes you feel at home in the many worlds he writes about, and also makes you want to now more about each of them. Like C. Wright Mills, Charles Lemert makes sociology a vital and moving discipline. This new book is a refreshing reminder of the enduring power of committed intellectuals and visionaries like Charles Lemert, and shows all of us that the joy of reading a fine book is still a stimulating and rewarding experience.”
–David Amram, Composer and Musician
“There is no question that Charles Lemert is socoiology's greatest working social theorist and that with this new reader his place in the sociological canon he has worked so tirelessly over the years to interpret and expand will most certainly be assured. But for me he will always be sociology's greatest unnamed novelist, making accessible, through good stories and characters, the often forgotten history of this discipline we all share.”
—Audrey Sprenger, Affiliated Faculty Charles Warren Center, Harvard University
Contents
Foreword by Anthony Elliott
“Lemert’s Social Theory” by Daniel Chaffee and Sam Han
Rethinking Social Knowledge
Chapter 1: Cultural Multiplexity and Religious Polytheism
Chapter 2: Sociological Theory and the Relativistic Paradigm
Chapter 3: Social Things
Chapter 4: Sociology as Theories of Lost Worlds
Chapter 5: Durkheim’s Ghosts in the Culture of Sociologies
Critical Sociology
Chapter 6: Sociology: Prometheus among the Sciences of Man
Chapter 7: The Uses of French Structuralism: Rethinking Vietnam
Chapter 8: Against capital-S Sociology
Dark Thoughts
Chapter 9: Dreaming in the Dark, November 26, 1997
Chapter 10: The Race of Time
Ethics and Identity
Chapter 11: Whose We? Dark Thoughts of the Universal Self, 1998
Chapter 12: Can Worlds be Changed? Ethics and the Multicultural Dream
Globalized Worlds
Chapter 13: If there is a Global WE, Might we all be Dispossessed?
Chapter 14: Surviving the New Individualism, with Anthony Elliott
Intellectual Memoir
Chapter 15: The Race of Time: Social Theory, Ethics and Politics
Bibliography: Charles Lemert’s Writings
Acknowledgements
Index