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Durkheim

Durkheim

Kieran Allen | Brian O'Boyle

(2017)

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Book Details

Abstract

Emile Durkheim, along with Karl Marx and Max Weber, is one of the three 'founding fathers of sociology'. This is the first book to situate his sociology in the context of his republican politics, freeing his ideas from more conventional studies and allowing the reader to see his ideas afresh.

This critical introduction argues that Durkheim's defence of Republican France in the 1890s had a considerable influence on his sociology, which cannot be fully understood when removed from its historical and political context. His dismissal of economic factors in suicide rates, the influence of his anti-feminist position on his findings on marriage rates, and the idealism behind his claim that religion is the key determinant in shaping society are all discussed.

Through analysing his writings, including The Division of Labour in Society, Suicide and The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, this book provides a fascinating, critical counterpoint to the existing works on this key figure of sociology.
'An important contribution to a glaring deficit in the sociological literature'
Steven Loyal, Senior Lecturer, School of Sociology, University College Dublin

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Cover Cover
Contents v
Preface vi
1. Durkheim Declassified 1
2. Durkheim's French Republicanism 12
3. The Division of Labour 32
4. Durkheim's Method of Scientific Inquiry 57
5. Suicide 80
6. The Elementary Forms of Religious Life 106
7. Educating Republican Citizens 132
8. Socialism and Sasint-Simon 148
9. The Limits to Durkheim's Republican Sociology 160
Notes 175
Bibliography 193
Index 201