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The Good News and the Bad News.

Authors :
Urry, John
Source :
Critical Sociology (Brill Academic Publishers). 2005, Vol. 31 Issue 3, p375-378. 4p.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

This article presents the author's comments on Michael Burawoy's article examining the critical turn to a public sociology. There is much that is attractive about Burawoy's examination of the critical turn to a public sociology. I find plausible his account of the academic nature of 1970s radical sociology especially that mobilized notions such as Althusser's theoretical practice. I also was cheered to read the account of the positive developments currently in train in the U.S. and especially with how social movements have got inside American sociology and are changing it from within. And I was with his advocacy of sociology developing new forms of engaging with and responding to multiple publics and modes of participation, to bring the public and sociology into intimate juxtaposition. But from the other side of the pond Burawoy's argument seems at the same time rather strange. The paper is unambiguously written from within American sociology. Sociologists from nowhere else could treat their sociology as nationally bounded and unrelated to global processes that in all other fields are transforming the social world. This means first that the stories of other sociologies are necessarily different from that of the U.S., but second that much about the story of any sociology cannot be understood without situating it within wider globalizing processes that sociology everywhere struggles to engage with.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08969205
Volume :
31
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Critical Sociology (Brill Academic Publishers)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17109192
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1163/1569163053946228