Sociology and the Demystification of the Modern World (RLE Social Theory)

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action
Actual Historical Actor
Administration Command
Allocative System
Black Man's Country
Black Man’s Country
Category=JHBA
collective
Colonial Administration
colonialism critique
Common Language
despotism
Ego's Expectations
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
frame
ideal
Ideal Typical Description
Larger Industrial World
Latin American Solidarity Organisation
Le Bon's Work
Mass Society Theory
Modern Family
moral philosophy sociology
Night Watchman
oriental
Oriental Despotism
political mobilisation studies
power dynamics analysis
private
Private Troubles
Radcliffe Brown's Functionalism
Radcliffe Brown’s Functionalism
Ration Alises
reference
Schutz's Work
social epistemology
sociological methodology in modern society
theory construction methods
troubles
type
Unstructured Plurality
USA's City
USA’s City
Weber's Wirtschaft Und Gesellschaft
White America
Wider Socioeconomic Systems
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138996373
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Dec 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Professor Rex’s controversial book concerns not only those who are professional sociologists but all thinking people who live in the modern world. One of the objects of sociology is to give ‘power to the people’, to make a contribution to the understanding of political problems. Rex writes from a deep conviction that sociology is a subject whose insights should be made available to the great mass of the people, so that they may liberate themselves from the mystification of social reality that is continually and routinely presented to them through the media, by those who exercise power and by those who have influence.

The book is dedicated to St Augustine and Franz Fanon, both of whom, Rex points out, were conscious of living in an age which was embarking on a new barbarism, but had the courage to use their intellects to help understand the possibility of a better future. Rex continues in this tradition, and his main preoccupations are reflected in the present book. It includes a discussion of the problem of social knowledge, an analysis of the basic problems of theory building, and, with the aid of concepts derived from Max Weber, an attempt to understand the major problems of the first, second and third worlds. The author also looks at social structures and moral perspectives, and discusses the vocation of a sociologist in a collapsing civilisation. The book is certain to stimulate debate, both in sociological and political fields and more generally, and is also a serious contribution to the discussion of the methodology and purposes of sociology.