The Decomposition of Sociology
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:5th Jan '95
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

In this challenging and controversial book, Horowitz examines the decline of sociology, both in terms of the decreasing number of students taking the subject and in terms of its diminishing significance as a discipline. He argues that contemporary sociological thought has lapsed into a pure critique which represents a crude and false reductionism of contemporary life and society.
One of the more foreceful and interesting contributions to this literature in recent years has been Irving Louis Horowitz's The Decomposition of Sociology, which deserves to be widely read by British, as well as American sociologists ... the book is intended to give sociology a good shaking, as well as to reach out to wider liberal publics in American society ... This is a good book precisely because it fails to conform to the standards of objectivity and fair-mindedness laid down by the American Sociological Association. If one ignores the polemical content, it also exemplifies a style of essay writing which is virtually extinct on this side of the Atlantic, but is particularly good for generating ideas, and making these accessible to a wider audience. * Sociological Research Online *
`Irving Louis Horowitz is one of my intellectual heroes, one of the few remaining public intellectuals in sociology and a scholar of the first rank ... He has had a genius, a prescience for seeing social trends and forces in nearly unrecognizable stages of cultural incubation.' British Journal of Sociology
ISBN: 9780195092561
Dimensions: 156mm x 235mm x 22mm
Weight: 454g
288 pages