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Contemporary Social Theory: An Introduction 3rd edition [Pehme köide]

(University of South Australia, Australia)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 442 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 320 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Nov-2021
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032132620
  • ISBN-13: 9781032132624
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 442 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 320 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Nov-2021
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032132620
  • ISBN-13: 9781032132624
Teised raamatud teemal:
"Now in its third edition, Anthony Elliott's comprehensive, stylish and accessible introduction continues to be the indispensable guide to social theory. Fully revised and updated, the book examines the major theoretical traditions from the Frankfurt School to posthumanism, and from feminism and post-structuralism to globalization theory and beyond. Classical debates in social theory are given careful appraisal, as are the major contemporary theorists - including Jurgen Habermas, Judith Butler, Anthony Giddens, Pierre Bourdieu, Julia Kristeva, Slavoj Zizek, Manuel Castells, Ulrich Beck, Zygmunt Bauman, Shoshana Zuboff and Bernard Stiegler. This edition includes a new chapter on the digital revolution, with consideration of how digital technologies in general and artificial intelligence in particular are resahaping societies. Like its predecessors, the third edition of Contemporary Social Theory combines stylish exposition with reflective social critique and original insights. This volume will prove a superb textbook with which to navigate the twists and turns of contemporary social theory as taught in the disciplines of sociology, politics, cultural and media studies and many more"--

Fully revised and updated, the book examines the major theoretical traditions from the Frankfurt School to posthumanism, and from feminism and post-structuralism to globalization theory and beyond.

Arvustused

Praise for previous editions

This is the best contemporary social theory text currently on the market. It is highly accessible, explaining ideas in the clearest possible language without compromising depth and complexity. Accordingly, it is a book that would work well for students at all levels. Undergraduates with no background in social theory will be able to easily engage with this text, and this is something that cannot be said of any other contemporary social theory textbook that considers the range of theorists and complexity of ideas that this book does. More advanced students, including professional social theorists, will find that Elliott provides great clarity on some of the most difficult, yet most influential, ideas in contemporary social thought.

Professor Ann Branaman, Florida Atlantic University, USA

It is very hard to write an outstanding introduction to any subject and particularly hard to do so for a subject as demanding as contemporary social theory. Anthony Elliott succeeds superbly. His book offers a reliable guide to the big debates in social theory while never glossing over the difficult questions.

Professor David Held, previously of the London School of Economics, UK

Magnificent. Elliott visits a vast range of theorists and shows how they reveal the beautiful complexity of everyday social life. He makes social theory relevant and meaningful, simple, sexy and exciting.

Tom Inglis, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University College Dublin, Ireland

No one I know is better able than Anthony Elliott to get to the heart of complex theories, then to write of them clearly yet critically. Contemporary Social Theory is exceptional for the range of the authors presented. Students and teachers will treasure this exciting travel guide through the thickets of social theory today.

Charles Lemert, Andrus Professor of Sociology at Wesleyan University and author of Thinking the Unthinkable, USA

This is an amazingly fluent analysis of contemporary social theory. It should be widely read for its careful and insightful dissection of the main theories and of their particular strengths and weaknesses. It will be a must-read on many "theory" courses around the world.

John Urry, previously Distinguished Professor, Department of Sociology, Lancaster University, UK

Intelligent and lucid, Anthony Elliotts introduction to contemporary social theory provides a remarkably complete overview of thinkers and themes. In exploring the organizing question what is society? he skilfully guides the student through a galaxy of major figures, including such luminaries as Bauman, Butler, Chodorow, Foucault, Giddens, Habermas, Lacan and Lemert. Incorporating many valuable pedagogical aids, Elliott makes social theory highly accessible. Contemporary Social Theory bristles with insights into our troubled world.

Professor Bryan S. Turner, Australian Catholic University, Australia

This is quite simply the best introduction to contemporary social theory that I have read. Profound and subtle in its judgements, yet very easy to read, Anthony Elliott has done much more than rehearse familiar debates or identify key thinkers. He has brought contemporary social theory to life by placing it within everyday experiences, troubles and dilemmas. And he has done so with a remarkable breadth of theoretical virtuosity covering everything from sexuality to globalization, language to political institutions and governance. This book will be invaluable to students and teachers alike.'

Emeritus Professor Robert Holton, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland

Anthony Elliott is without question one of the leaders in the younger generation of sociologists. Contemporary Social Theory provides an overview of various recent sociological theories and is an essential text for anybody interested in sociological theories, including Japanese students and faculty.

Professor Masataka Katagiri, Rissho University, Japan

Here is the latest example of what Anthony Elliott does best: he brings his readers in on the key social, personal and political issues of our time. Always readable and interesting, Contemporary Social Theory: An Introduction includes a wide range of modern social thought, from structuralism, to feminism, to globalization, and engagingly demonstrates these theories relevance in our own lives. As importantly, Elliott provides us a way to think critically, making the reader a more thoughtful reader of social theory as well as a participant in contemporary social debates. A book that is stimulating to both teacher and student alike and that enlivens the classroom experience.

Professor Jeffrey Prager, Sociology, UCLA, USA

Anthony Elliott has written a wide-ranging and appealing book, setting new standards for introductory texts in social theory. Contemporary Social Theory is clear in style and accessible in presentation. It is sure to stimulate students and beginners in the field whilst proving of considerable interest to their teachers. It will also strike sparks with those with a professional research interest in social theory.

Professor Paul du Gay, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark

Extraordinary in scope, Contemporary Social Theory takes the reader on a world tour of social theory since the Second World War and offers the student clear and accessible guidance around what are often complex and obscure theoretical edifices. More than this, Anthony Elliott provides not just description but evaluation and critique, and the originality of his mind will make this a pleasure to read for all thoughtful people engaged with the politics of living.

Professor Paul Hoggett, University of the West of England, UK

The renewal of the teaching of social theory can now take place! For in Anthony Elliotts scholarly, thorough and limpid volume, teachers of theory have the perfect support text, one guaranteed to bring students fully into the exciting drama that it lays out: the drama of contemporary social life as social theorists from the Frankfurt School to Giorgio Agamben have mapped it out.

Professor John Lechte, Macquarie University, Australia

Social theory gives us the building blocks to make sense of our lives and explore how they link to the processes which shape what we can do and how we live. But it takes a master of the craft to turn the blocks into a building in which it is possible to live and flourish. This book shows that Anthony Elliott is a master of the craft.

The house that is built within the pages of this comprehensive book is one of many rooms, in which all students will find a place in which they can think and, moreover, in which they will be given in an exceptionally accessible and well-informed style the resources which that thinking needs if it is going to succeed.

I have little doubt that thanks to its encyclopaedic spread, authoritative content and keen eye for the excellent illustration, this book will be valued highly by everyone who wants or needs to think and live with social theory. And ultimately that means all of us.

Professor Keith Tester, formerly of the University of Portsmouth, UK

Elliott provides a sweeping survey that is both accessible and sophisticated. Organized in thematic chapters that make excellent use of vignettes from the lives of everyday people to draw the reader into the issues, Elliott elegantly summarizes the main points of each theorists work, provides some discussion that stretches the readers understanding, and rehearses the main criticisms. The book weaves together the disparate strands of social theory, including psychoanalysis, feminism, (post)structuralism and critical theory alongside the issues of globalization and postmodernity. This book will set the agenda for many university courses in contemporary social theory.

Professor Douglas Ezzy, University of Tasmania, Australia

Here, in his new introductory text, Elliott returns with new insights to some of the classics of social theory and charts a path through the most interesting and important contemporary social theorists. I can think of few writers better equipped to carry off this task and Elliott has done it here magnificently. Elliott combines his deep knowledge of social theory, his lightly worn erudition and an engaging style that is a pleasure to read. The personal stories that begin most chapters are a highlight and manage to bring home what is at stake in the theories and ideas that follow. What he has achieved here should win over a generation of new students to social theory.

Anthony Moran, La Trobe University, Australia

Covering an impressive range of theories and theorists, and presenting them in an accessible and elegant fashion, reading Anthony Elliotts text is an ideal way to navigate the often complex terrain of modern social thought.

Professor David Inglis, University of Helsinki, Finland

This is the best introduction to social theory we are ever likely to need. The writing is crystal clear, the arguments are complex but accessible and this is likely to become the best friend of every sociology undergraduate. This book has been especially written for those who want to know why social theory is so important to understanding the world right now. At last, we finally have a book we can recommend to our students with confidence.

Nick Stevenson, University of Nottingham, UK

Preface to the third edition xiv
Preface to the second edition xvi
1 The textures of society
1(19)
What is society?
3(3)
Society and social theory
6(2)
Coping with climate change: Anthony Ciddens
8(3)
Key themes in contemporary social theory
11(4)
Living in the world after Covid-19: addressing the future
15(3)
Further questions
18(1)
Further reading
18(1)
Internet links
19(1)
2 The contemporary relevance of the classics
20(23)
The contradictions of modernity: Marx
22(5)
Modernity as iron cage: Weber
27(3)
Modernity as moral bonds: Durkheim
30(5)
Trauma, tragedy and Thanatos: Freud
35(4)
Summary points
39(2)
Further questions
41(1)
Further reading
41(1)
Internet links
42(1)
3 The Frankfurt School
43(35)
Horkheimer and Adorno: Dialectic of Enlightenment
46(2)
Freudian revolution: the uses of psychoanalysis
48(2)
Fromm: fear of freedom
50(6)
Adorno: The Authoritarian Personality, anti-Semitism and the psychodynamics of modernity
56(4)
Written in the stars: Adorno on astrology
60(2)
Marcuse: Eros, or one-dimensional futures?
62(4)
Utopia and social transformation: Marcuse on libidinal rationality
66(3)
Criticisms of Marcuse
69(4)
Summary points
73(2)
Further questions
75(1)
Further reading
75(1)
Internet links
76(2)
4 Structuralism
78(37)
Saussure and structural linguistics
80(5)
Criticisms of Saussure
85(3)
The Raw and The Cooked: Uvi-Strauss and structural anthropology
88(2)
Roland Barthes: structuralist semiology and popular culture
90(6)
Foucault: knowledge, social order and power
96(3)
Society and disciplined bodies
99(3)
The limits of structuralism: Foucault's History of Sexuality
102(5)
Governmentality
107(2)
Criticisms of Foucault
109(3)
Summary points
112(1)
Further questions
113(1)
Further reading
113(1)
Internet links
114(1)
5 Post-structuralism
115(33)
Lacan: the mirror stage and imaginary
120(2)
Lacan's reformulation of structuralism: language, symbolic order and the unconscious
122(2)
After Lacan: Althusser and society as interpellation
124(3)
Cinema studies: the screen as mirror
127(2)
2ifek: beyond interpellation
129(2)
Appraisal of Lacan
131(4)
Derrida: difference and deconstruction
135(4)
Rereading psychoanalysis: Derrida's critique of Lacan
139(1)
Appraisal of Derrida
140(1)
Post-structuralism and post-colonial theory: Bhabha's The Location of Culture
141(3)
Summary points
144(1)
Further questions
145(1)
Further reading
145(2)
Internet links
147(1)
6 Theories of structuration
148(34)
Anthony Giddens: structuration and the practical routines of social life
150(7)
Giddens on modernity and the self
157(6)
Giddens, politics and the third way
163(3)
Criticisms of Giddens
166(3)
Pierre Bourdieu: habitus and practical social life
169(4)
Questions of taste: Bourdieu's Distinction
173(2)
Criticisms of Bourdieu
175(2)
Summary points
177(2)
Further questions
179(1)
Further reading
179(2)
Internet links
181(1)
7 Contemporary critical theory
182(31)
Habermas: the democratization of society
184(2)
The early Habermas: development and decline of the public sphere
186(4)
Habermas on capitalism, communication and colonization
190(5)
Emotional imperialism: feminist criticism of Habermas
195(2)
Habermas on globalization and post-national societies
197(3)
Towards deliberative democracy
200(2)
Criticisms of Habermas
202(3)
Honneth: the struggle for recognition
205(5)
Summary points
210(1)
Further questions
211(1)
Further reading
211(1)
Internet links
212(1)
8 Feminism and post-feminist theory
213(46)
Theorizing patriarchy: 1970s feminisms
215(3)
Juliet Mitchell on femininity and sexual difference
218(4)
Dinnerstein: societal nurturing arrangements
222(2)
Chodorow: The Reproduction of Mothering
224(5)
Benjamin: the analysis of love
229(2)
Julia Kristeva: semiotic subversions
231(5)
Kristeva on motherhood and maternal ethics
236(2)
Appraisal of Kristeva
238(2)
Irigaray: the feminine imaginary
240(2)
Judith Butler: scripts of gender performance
242(4)
Appraisal of Butler
246(2)
Queer theory
248(6)
Summary points
254(1)
Further questions
255(1)
Further reading
256(1)
Internet links
257(2)
9 Postmodernity
259(39)
Deleuze and Cuatarri: postmodernity as schizoid desire
261(4)
The postmodern condition: Lyotard
265(4)
Baudrillard: postmodernity as simulated media culture
269(5)
Baudrillard's non-event: `The Gulf War did not take place'
274(2)
Jameson: postmodernity as global capitalist transformations
276(5)
Bauman: postmodernity as modernity subtract illusions
281(4)
Postmodern ethics: the global moral gap
285(5)
Criticisms of postmodernism
290(3)
Summary points
293(1)
Further questions
294(1)
Further reading
295(2)
Internet links
297(1)
10 Networks, risks, liquids
298(41)
Manuel Castells: The Network Society
301(7)
Criticisms of Castells
308(2)
Global networks and fluids: Urry on mobilities
310(1)
Ulrich Beck: organized lives in a world of risk
311(4)
Beck on reflexive modernization
315(3)
Individualization
318(1)
Criticisms of Beck
319(3)
Living with liquidization: Bauman
322(5)
Collateral Damage: Bauman on social inequality
327(3)
Bauman on liquid lives, loves and fears
330(2)
Criticisms of Bauman
332(4)
Summary points
336(1)
Further questions
337(1)
Further reading
337(1)
Internet links
338(1)
11 Globalization
339(36)
The globalization debate
342(1)
Global sceptics
342(3)
Radical globalists
345(2)
Global transformationalists
347(2)
Global cosmopolitanism
349(4)
Globalization since 9/11
353(6)
Criticisms of the globalization debate
359(1)
Globalization, work and the new economy
359(4)
Uncertain lives in the global electronic economy
363(2)
Globalization, communication and culture
365(3)
Globalization and the new individualism
368(2)
Life on the move: Elliott and Urry
370(3)
Summary points
373(1)
Further questions
374(1)
Further reading
374(1)
Internet links
374(1)
12 The digital revolution: posthumanism and beyond
375(31)
Digital transformation
377(2)
Technophobes and AI pessimists
379(1)
Technophiles and AI optimists
380(3)
The robots are coming!: jobs and inequality
383(3)
Social theory since AI
386(2)
Bernard Stiegler: automatic societies
388(3)
Critical comments on Stiegler
391(3)
Shoshana Zuboff: surveillance capitalism
394(2)
Critical comments on Zuboff
396(1)
Rosi Braidotti: posthuman identities
397(4)
Governing biomedicine: Rose
401(2)
Summary points
403(1)
Further questions
404(1)
Further reading
404(1)
Internet links
405(1)
Afterword: social theory today and towards 2050 406(11)
References 417(14)
Index 431
Anthony Elliott is Research Professor of Sociology at the University of South Australia, where he is Dean of External Engagement and Executive Director of the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence and Network.