This book addresses the manifold crisis of current societies and
understands it as a failure of normative social structuration. As an
exemplar for this development, it analyses the decline of welfare
state models and the corresponding societal compromise. Yet, it
evaluates them as a symptom of a wider malaise of normative orders in
complex societies. The question thus arises as to how social science
can study the ongoing societal transformation. The book frames the
phenomenon as ‘normative intermittency’ to capture its fluid
alternation of social structuration and destructuration and develops
its analysis in three steps: first, it draws a theoretically reflected
symptomatic of its occurrences; it then establishes the sociological
diagnosis necessary to understand its unfolding and finally evaluates
its political outcomes. Methodologically, the book advocates a
complete overhaul of the analytical frames of sociology to gauge the
intermittent rhythm of the ongoing societal transformation. Thus, it
develops an innovative reading of classical sociological theory beyond
a number of unreflected axiomatic assumptions of the current
sociological mainstream. Thanks to the assessment of the political
outcomes of failing social structuration the book turns to a
discussion of the development of possible emancipation paths in the
form of ‘transformative social action’; reflexively, this accounts
for the results of the sociological diagnosis of the crisis of
normative social orders. The main analyses within the book scrutinise
a number of empirical phenomena that establish normative intermittency
in current societies and refer to the major debates that are taking
place on the related topics in the state of art of sociological and
political theory.
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A Sociology of Failing Social Structuration
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783031061745
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter