Founders, Classics, Canons

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A01=Peter Baehr
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Alexander Von Schelting
Attention Space
Author_Peter Baehr
Authoritative Categories
Canon Caricature
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Category=NHAH
Christian Canon
critical theory debates
disciplinary tradition
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eq_history
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fathers
founding
Free Democratic Basic Order
German Sociological Society
heritage
higher education curriculum
Institut International De Sociologie
intellectual history
Intellectual Networks
Interpretive Appropriation
liberal university values
Marx's Eighteenth Brumaire
Napoleon III
Pantheon
Peter Baehr
Primary Coordinates
Radical Social Theory
Reciprocal Elucidation
Roman Catholic Canon
science
social
sociological classics critique
sociological theory
sociology's
Sociology's Heritage
Sociology's Past
structure
suppleness
textual
Textual Suppleness
Theological Canon
Timeless
Und
Weber's Methodological Writings
Weber's Wirtschaft Und Gesellschaft

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412857055
  • Weight: 362g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Dec 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Founders, classics, and canons have been vitally important in helping to frame sociology's identity. Within the academy today, a number of positions—feminist, postmodernist, postcolonial—question the status of "tradition."

In Founders, Classics, Canons, Peter Baehr defends the continuing importance of sociology's classics and traditions in a university education. Baehr offers arguments against interpreting, defending, and attacking sociology's great texts and authors in terms of founders and canons. He demonstrates why, in logical and historical terms, discourses and traditions cannot actually be "founded" and why the term "founder" has little explanatory content. Equally, he takes issue with the notion of "canon" and argues that the analogy between the theological canon and sociological classic texts, though seductive, is mistaken.

Although he questions the uses to which the concepts of founder, classic, and canon have been put, Baehr is not dismissive. On the contrary, he seeks to understand the value and meaning these concepts have for the people who employ them in the cultural battle to affirm or attack the liberal university tradition.

Peter Baehr is professor and head of the department of sociology and social policy at Lingnan University, Hong Kong as well as a fellow of the Center for Asian Pacific Studies. His books include Hannah Arendt, Totalitarianism, and the Social Sciences: Critical Encounters; Founders, Classics, Canons: Modern Disputes on the Origins and Appraisal of Sociology's Heritage; and Caesar and the Fading of the Roman World.

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