The Active Society RevisitedWilson C. McWilliams Rowman & Littlefield, 2006 - 352 pages The Active Society, published in 1968, is the most ambitious book in Amitai Etzioni's remarkable career. It is sociology in the grand tradition, with at least one foot outside its own time. In it, Etzioni confronts the great modern irony-- that setting out to become the masters of nature, humans become mastered by their own instruments-- championing the sense of agency and aiming to demonstrate that humanity can direct its own creations, or at least, that societies can aspire to a greater measure of authentic self-government. In this new collection of essays, Wilson Carey McWilliams brings together scholars in a range of disciplines to analyze the significance and shortcomings of this important work. They comment on the importance of Etzioni's contributions, the magnitude of his achievement, and the extent to which The Active Society speaks to contemporary social and political life. |
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Page 38
... forms , notably religious doctrines . This special position alone warrants a closer look at empirical knowledge and its impact on agency . Empirical Knowledge and Agency In what The Active Society calls the " post - modern " world ...
... forms , notably religious doctrines . This special position alone warrants a closer look at empirical knowledge and its impact on agency . Empirical Knowledge and Agency In what The Active Society calls the " post - modern " world ...
Page 41
... forms of empirical knowledge . I follow Ellingson's use of discourse as " a relatively bounded set of arguments around a specific diagnosis of and solution to some social problem . " 54 Discourses , including their rhetorical devices ...
... forms of empirical knowledge . I follow Ellingson's use of discourse as " a relatively bounded set of arguments around a specific diagnosis of and solution to some social problem . " 54 Discourses , including their rhetorical devices ...
Page 324
Wilson C. McWilliams. that Etzioni finds underarticulated in many predominant forms of liberalism , and in particular , in those forms that stress individualism arising from social contract theory.70 That content is embedded in Etzioni's ...
Wilson C. McWilliams. that Etzioni finds underarticulated in many predominant forms of liberalism , and in particular , in those forms that stress individualism arising from social contract theory.70 That content is embedded in Etzioni's ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Cultural Dimensions of The Active Society | 23 |
The Cybernetic Institutionalist | 53 |
Copyright | |
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abolitionist action Active Society agency agency-enhancing alienation Amerco American Amitai Etzioni analysis argues authentic basic bureaucracies citizens civil society coalitions collective actors commitment communitarian complex concept conflict consensus constitutional contemporary corporate Court critical culture as practice cybernetic decision-making decisions democracy democratic discourses elites empirical ethical gain Etzioni's theory example forms Free Press futurology Geneva Conventions goals groups Hannah Arendt Human Rights Human Rights Watch Ibid ideology important inauthenticity individual institutions intellectuals International Criminal Court issues Jean-Paul Akayesu knowledge liberal liberal democratic malleable means mobilization modern moral MoveOn MoveOn.org needs normative organizational organizations participation post-capitalist post-Fordist post-modern potential problem produce rape reality-testing responsive Review role Selznick sense sexual violence social and political social movements social structures Sociology suffragists symbolic bundles Theory of Societal tion tive transformation United University Press values women York