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History and Theory after the Fall

An Essay on Interpretation

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
232 Seiten
1990
University of Chicago Press (Verlag)
978-0-226-88606-0 (ISBN)
68,55 inkl. MwSt
In this ambitious work, Fred Weinstein confronts the obstacles that have increasingly frustrated our attempts to explain social and historical reality. Traditionally, we have relied on history and social theory to describe the ways people understand the world they live in. But the ordering explanations we have always used—derived from the classical social theories originally forged by Marx, Tocqueville, Weber, Durkheim, Freud—have collapsed.

In the wake of this collapse or "fall," the rival claims of fiction, psychoanalysis, sociology, anthropology, and history have created the dilemma of radical relativism, the prospect of multiple interpretations of any complex historical event. The basic strategy of social theory and the social sciences—the search for underlying unities—proves so inherently contradictory and has provided so little in the way of reliable knowledge of social and historical relationships that to many critics it seems no longer worth pursuing.

Weinstein enters the debate by rejecting any search for underlying structural unities, dynamic or social, through which historians have attempted to find continuity with the past. He looks instead to ideological processes, to the construction of successive and changing versions of reality that mediate between the power of fantasy on the one side and the power of the social world on the other. He argues further that the need to use ideological constructs in this way accounts for the heterogeneous and changing content of social movements and for the persistent need people have always had for authoritative leaders, even in democratized societies. He suggests that people have historically been able to take a step away from leaders only by substituting the possession of objects such as property or money. This book is a breakthrough in poststructuralist theory that is sure to stimulate considerable discussion, especially about the shape of the social sciences and the future of historical interpretation.

Fred Weinstein, professor and department chair in history at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, is the author of The Dynamics of Nazism and, with Gerald M. Platt, The Wish to Be Free and Psychoanalytic Sociology.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 8.5.1990
Sprache englisch
Maße 17 x 24 mm
Gewicht 510 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Geschichtstheorie / Historik
ISBN-10 0-226-88606-9 / 0226886069
ISBN-13 978-0-226-88606-0 / 9780226886060
Zustand Neuware
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