The sociogony : social facts and the ontology of objects, things, and monsters
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The sociogony : social facts and the ontology of objects, things, and monsters
(Studies in critical social sciences, v. 128)
Brill, c2019
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [287]-338) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Sociogony re-examines the social ontology of what Durkheim calls 'social facts' in the light of critical and progressive hostilities to the facticity of facts and the necessity of moral absolutes in the shift from bourgeois liberalism to a neoliberal global order. The introduction offers a wide-ranging rumination on the concept of the absolute after its apparent downfall; the chapter on facts turns the problem of external authority on its head and the chapter dealing with the sociogony situates facts in a process of generation, rule, and decay. Drawing heavily on the works of Hegel, Marx, Weber, and Durkheim, the resulting synthesis is what the author refers to as a Marxheimian Social Theory that offers a new map and a stable ontology for the homeless mind.
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Towards a "Marxheimian" Sociology
1. Authority and Authoritarianism
2. Reason and Mediation
3. The Concept
4. The Absolute
5. Ersatz Absolutes
6. Critical and Ordinary Sociology Circle the Invisible
7. The Negative Absolute
8. Networks and Sideways Glances at Jittery Totalities
9. Marxist Association
1. The Facticity of the Social
1. Social Facts
2. The Impersonality of Facts
3. Collective Conduct
4. Collective Consciousness
5. Collective Emotions and Sentiments
6. Currents and Crystallizations
7. Externality
8. Coercion and Authority
9. Irreducibility
2. The Sociogony
1. LARD (Lack, Assemblage, Repression, and Desideration, or, Weird Nature)
2. Ebullience
3. Projection and Externalization
4. Objectification and Internalization
5. Estrangement, Fetishisitc Reversals and Inversions, or, the Problem with Straw Hats
6. Reification and Sublation
7. Alienation and Domination
8. Derealization and Desublimation, or, Treitschke in Narnia
3. A Formal Intermezzo
1. Hyper-Praxis
2. The Dynamistic Circle
3. The Inhuman Equivalent
Bibliography
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"