1st Edition

Norbert Elias Post-Philosophical Sociology

By Richard Kilminster Copyright 2007
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    Few sociologists of the first rank have scandalized the academic world to the extent that Elias did. Developed out of the German sociology of knowledge in the 1920s, Elias’s sociology contains a sweeping radicalism which declares an academic ‘war on all your houses’. His sociology of the ‘human condition’ sweeps aside the contemporary focus on ‘modernity’ and rejects most of the paradigms of sociology as one-sided, economistic, teleological, individualistic and/or rationalistic. As sociologists, Elias also asks us to distance ourselves from mainstream psychology, history and above all, philosophy, which is summarily abandoned, although carried forward on a higher level.

    This enlightening book written by a close friend and pupil of Elias, is the first book to explain the refractory, uncomfortable, side of Elias’s sociological radicalism and to brace us for its implications. It is also the first in-depth analysis of Elias’s last work The Symbol Theory in the light of selected contemporary developments in archaeology, anthropology and evolutionary theory.

    1. Understanding Elias  2. Origins of Elias’s Synthesis  3. Norbert Elias and Karl Mannheim  4. The Civilizing Process: The Structure of a Classic  5. Involved Detachment: Knowledge and Self-Knowledge in Elias  6. The Symbol Theory: Secular Humanism as a Research Programme  7. Concluding Remarks: The Fourth Blow to Man’s Narcissism?

    Biography

    Richard Kilminster is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Leeds. His research interests are in sociological theory and the sociology of knowledge. He is an authority on the life and work of Norbert Elias. The present book compliments the author’s The Sociological Revolution: From the Enlightenment to the Global Age (Routledge 1998, reprinted 2000) which relates Elias’s perspective to mainstream sociology.