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Abstract
‘The Anthem Companion to Talcott Parsons’ offers the best contemporary work on Talcott Parsons, written by the best scholars currently working in this field. Original, authoritative and wide-ranging, the critical assessments of this volume will make it ideal for Parsons students and scholars alike.
‘Anthem Companions to Sociology’ offer authoritative and comprehensive assessments of major figures in the development of sociology from the last two centuries. Covering the major advancements in sociological thought, these companions offer critical evaluations of key figures in the American and European sociological tradition, and will provide students and scholars with both an in-depth assessment of the makers of sociology and chart their relevance to modern society.
A. Javier Treviño was a research fellow in sociology at the University of Sussex, England, and a Fulbright Scholar to the Republic of Moldova. He is the author or editor of several books including The Sociology of Law, Talcott Parsons Today: His Theory and Legacy in Contemporary Sociology and George C. Homans: History, Theory, and Method. He has served as president of the Justice Studies Association and of the Society for the Study of Social Problems.
This collection of eleven chapters, written by scholars who have frequently made Parsons’s ideas a central component of their work, is set in two parts. In Part I, consisting of chapters 1 through 6, a variety of issues that were of particular empirical and theoretical concern to Parsons at various points in his career are analyzed, critiqued and updated: German totalitarianism, political power in liberal democracies, the student protest movements on U.S. college campuses, the therapist–patient relationship in psychotherapy, the phenomenon of death and the reception of his ideas on the social system. Together these chapters point to some of Parsons’s interests in political and humanist matters, all of which, at one time or another, were—if not always tidily, at least satisfactorily—subsumed within and addressed by his general theory of action as it continued to develop. Thus, Nazism as a totalitarian social structure could be explained by the pattern variables, the notion of power became one of the generalized media of interchange, the expressiveness inherent in the 1960s campus unrest and in the therapeutic relationship was understood in terms of the AGIL schema and death was considered in connection with the telic order.
Part II, which includes chapters 7 through 11, focuses on two interrelated themes that characterize the late phase of Parsons’s work: progressive evolution and the societal community. Beginning in the mid-1960s the process of evolution—both in its societal and cultural aspects—was given primary of place by Parsons in further explaining social differentiation and integration—but also, and more fundamentally, in dealing with the problem of social change. For Parsons, evolutionary development, with crucial cultural innovations taking place in the “seed-bed” societies of Israel and classical Greece, had culminated in modern society, which in the Western context brought about the industrial, democratic and education revolutions, and in the American context led to the development of an “institutionalized individualism” reinforced by the core value of “instrumental activism.” Both of these latter concepts are given extensive treatment in Parsons’s last book, the posthumously published American Society. Of special significance in this work is the notion of the societal community—particularly of the American variety—that Parsons contends contributes to internal integration though citizenship and the normatively defined obligations that citizenship engenders. In short, Part II demonstrates the importance that Parsons gave to modern civil society in general as well as to the exceptional status that he attributed to American society in particular.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Front Matter | i | ||
Half Title | i | ||
Series | ii | ||
Title | iii | ||
Copyright | iv | ||
Contents | v | ||
Chapters | 1 | ||
Introduction | 1 | ||
Part I: Political and Humanist Concerns | 21 | ||
Chapter One: Fighting the Deadly Enemy of Democracy: Sociology against National Socialism | 23 | ||
Chapter Two: Parsons’s Critique of the Power Elite Thesis: Foundations for a Comprehensive Theory of Power | 43 | ||
Chapter Three: The Expressive Revolution and the University: Parsons vs. Gouldner | 55 | ||
Chapter Four: Parsons, Psychoanalysis and the Therapeutic Relationship | 73 | ||
Chapter Five: Meanings of Life and Death: Insights of the Human Condition Paradigm | 91 | ||
Chapter Six: Luhmann’s Reception of Parsons | 113 | ||
Part II: Social Evolution and the American Societal Community | 131 | ||
Chapter Seven: Explaining Modernity: Talcott Parsons’s Evolutionary Theory and Individualism | 133 | ||
Chapter Eight: Talcott Parsons’s Historical Analysis and the Cultural–Political Freeze in China: A Reinterpretation | 155 | ||
Chapter Nine: Talcott Parsons and American Exceptionalism | 177 | ||
Chapter Ten: American Society and the Societal Community: Talcott Parsons, Citizenship and Diversity | 191 | ||
Chapter Eleven: Parsons and Nisbet: Two Versions of Sociological Communitarianism | 207 | ||
Back Matter | 223 | ||
Contributors | 223 | ||
Index | 225 |