Dialectics of Inquiry Across the Historical Social Sciences

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A01=David Baronov
Aberrant State
Articulated Ages
Author_David Baronov
Autonomous Determination
case study methodology
Category=GPS
Category=JHBA
Category=JHBC
chair
content
Dependent Maintenance
draft
Draft Riots
Early Urban Formalization
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fi Nite Event
Fi Nite Lives
Fordist Mass Production
Global Aid Prevention
global capitalism studies
historical sociology
Industrial Chemical Engineering
jena
Jena Chair
local event impact analysis
Material Content
Modern Functionalist Design
ontological
Ontological Content
Ontological Spheres
phenomenological analysis
political
Postcolonial Mozambique
realms
riots
River Flood
social change theory
Social Interpretations
Social Political Content
Specialized Commodity Production
spheres
structural agency
temporal
Temporal Realms
Urban Industrial Development
Western Social Theory
York City Draft Riots

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415717632
  • Weight: 770g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Oct 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book turns conventional global-historical analysis on its head, demonstrating, first, that local events cannot be derived — logically or historically — from large-scale, global-historical structures and processes and, second, that it is these structures and processes that, in fact, emerge from our analysis of local events. This is made evident via an analysis of three disparate events: the New York City Draft Riots, AIDS in Mozambique, and a 2007 flood in central Uruguay. In each case, Baronov chronicles how expressions of human agency at the level of those caught up in each event give form and substance to various abstract global-historical concepts — such as slavery in the Americas, global capitalist production, and colonial/postcolonial Africa. Underlying this repositioning of the local and the ephemeral is an immanent, phenomenological analysis that illustrates how mere transient events are the progenitors of otherwise abstract, global-historical concepts. Traversing the intersections of human agency and structural determinism, Baronov deftly retains the nuance and serendipity of everyday life, while deploying this nuance and serendipity to further embellish our understanding of those enduring global-historical structures and processes that shape large-scale, long-term, historical accounts of social and cultural change across the historical social sciences.

David Baronov is Professor of Sociology at St. John Fisher College.

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