The Promise of Poststructuralist Sociology: Marginalized Peoples and the Problem of KnowledgeState University of New York Press, 2008 M05 8 - 234 pages In this fresh look at the serious challenges posed to sociology by poststructuralist philosophy, Clayton W. Dumont Jr. maintains that disempowered, marginalized peoples have much to gain from a poststructuralist interrogation of sociology's philosophical and theological presuppositions. He argues that debates among American sociologists in the 1980s and 1990s over the value of difficult poststructuralist writings failed to examine cultural assumptions rooted in the discipline's extended Greek and Christian inheritances. Writing in an accessible style, the author situates complex poststructuralist ideas in tangible examples drawn from everyday life. The book concludes with analyses of the heated political conflict surrounding the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990 and affirmative action programs, illustrating the promise of increased political efficacy and civic responsibility of a poststructuralist-informed sociology. |
Contents
1 | |
Understanding Poststructuralist Assumptions | 9 |
2 A genealogy of the scientific self | 32 |
3Toward apostchristian ethic of responsibility insociology | 54 |
4The american debate on postmodernism | 78 |
5Whos understanding whose past?Telling the Truth about Native Dead | 108 |
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The Promise of Poststructuralist Sociology: Marginalized Peoples and the ... Clayton W. Dumont No preview available - 2008 |
Common terms and phrases
academic affirmative action African Americans ancestors anthropological anthropologists archaeological archaeologists argued assume attack attempt believe century chapter civil rights claim color critics cultural dead debate Denzin Derrida Descartes différance discipline discourse discrimination empirical epistemological ethnic European European Americans example existence experiences federal Foucault genealogy graves Greek and Christian Greek philosophy human Indians individual insist institutionalized intellectual Jacques Derrida Klamath knowledge Larsen Bay learned Lemert lives logic means metaphysical Michel Foucault minorities modern moral Museum NAGPRA narrations narratives National Native American never numbers objective one’s oral percent philosophy Plato political possibility postmodern poststructuralism poststructuralist pursuit quest race racial racism reality recognize remains repatriation responsibility Ritzer scientific sense society sociologists sociology Socrates speak stories structuralist structuralist sociology structure struggle subjectivity teleology tell textual theological theory things tion tive tribes truth understand understood white Americans words writings York