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Postmodernism
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Elias Figurations denies structure agency dichotomy The Civilizing Process Changes in everyday behaviors become more self-constrained Sources – books on manners from 13 th to 19 th centuries Occurs through increasing dependency chains
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Control and Self-Control Monopoly of force concentrates and becomes more passive Self constraint takes over in social space Because of increasing interdependence and connections among individuals (dependency chains)
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Bauman’s sociology Postmodern Sociology Sociology heavily influenced by postmodern ideas, irrational approach Sociology of Postmodernity Sociology of rational and systematic discourse with an effort to develop a model of postmodernity
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Bauman’s Comparison Modernism Universality Homogeneity Monotony Clarity Postmodernism Institutional pluralism Variety Contingency Ambivalence
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Postmodernism = increasing tolerance, but also increasing ambivalence Fears become privatized Fight off fears through community (socially local)
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Politics Modernity Separation of theory from politics Postmodernity Cannot separate theory from politics Declining centrality of the state = power in smaller more diffuse locations
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Changes in Politics 1. Tribalism – communities 2. Politics of desire – relevance 3. Politics of fear – reliability/experts 4. Politics of certainty – trust/credibility
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Ethics Pluralism of authority No binding norms Purposes become part of dialogue Centrality of Choice/Autonomy of Agent Self determination = self monitoring, self reflection… Limits on agent are hotly contested (How far does the autonomy go?)
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Theory of Postmodernity 1. Postmodern world complex/unpredictable 2. Lacks of central goal-setting organization 3. Agents are partly constrained 4. Habitats appear uncertain/indeterminate 5. Identity is constructed 6. Body is the (only) constant = constraint 7. No explicit life plans – orientation points 8. Accessibility to resources varies – visibility 9. Requires knowledge and information
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Classical Theory Social and Intellectual Forces Revolutions – political and industrial Feminism Urbanization Religious Change Enlightenment and Rise of Science Conservative reaction to Enlightenmt
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Classical Theory Themes Marx – economic change, rise of capitalism, political/social revolution Durkheim – shared morality, social integration and regulation, growth of science, division of labor Weber – development of capitalism, economic complexity, changes in religion and rationality, authority
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Modernism
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Postmodernism
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