Counter to popular perceptions, contemporary American sociology is and
promotes a profoundly sacred project at heart. Sociology today is in
fact animated by sacred impulses, driven by sacred commitments, and
serves a sacred project. Sociology appears on the surface to be a
secular, scientific enterprise--its founding fathers were mostly
atheists. Its basic operating premises are secular and naturalistic.
Sociologists today are disproportionately not religious, compared to
all Americans, and often irreligious. _The Sacred Project of American
Sociology _shows, counter-intuitively, that the secular enterprise
that everyday sociology appears to be pursuing is actually not what is
really going on at sociology's deepest level. Christian Smith conducts
a self-reflexive, tables-turning, cultural and institutional sociology
of the profession of American sociology itself, showing that this
allegedly secular discipline ironically expresses Emile Durkheim's
inescapable sacred, exemplifies its own versions of Marxist false
consciousness, and generates a spirited reaction against Max Weber's
melancholically observed disenchantment of the world.American
sociology does not escape the analytical net that it casts over the
rest of the ordinary world. Sociology itself is a part of that very
human, very social, often very sacred and spiritual world. And
sociology's ironic mis-recognition of its own sacred project leads to
a variety of arguably self-destructive and distorting tendencies. This
book re-asserts a vision for what sociology is most important for, in
contrast with its current commitments, and calls sociologists back to
a more honest, fair, and healthy vision of its purpose.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199377152
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter