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Michael Burawoy has helped to reshape the theory and practice of sociology across the Western world. Public Sociology is his most thoroughgoing attempt to explore what a truly committed, engaged sociology should look like in the twenty-first century.
Burawoy looks back on the defining moments of his intellectual journey, exploring his pivotal early experiences as a researcher, such as his fieldwork in a Zambian copper mine and a Chicago factory. He recounts his time as a graduate and professor during the ideological ferment in sociology departments of the 1970s, and explores how his experiences intersected with a changing political and intellectual world up to the present. Recalling Max Weber, Burawoy argues that sociology is much more than just a discipline - it is a vocation, to be practiced everywhere and by everyone.
List of contents
List of Tables
Preface
Introduction - The Promise of Sociology
Part One: Theory and Practice
1. Theory: Utopia and Anti-Utopia
2. Practice: The (Di)vision of Sociological Labor
Part Two: Policy Sociology
3. The Language Question in University Education
4. Job Evaluation in a Racial Order
Part Three: Public Sociology
5. The Color of Class
6. Student Rebellion
Part Four: Critical Sociology
7. Race, Class and Colonialism
8. Migrant Labor and the State
9. Manufacturing Consent
10. Racial Capitalism
Part Five: Professional Sociology
11. Advancing a Research Program
12. Painting Socialism
13. The Great Involution
Part Six: Real Utopias
14. Third-Wave Marketization
15. Whither the Public University?
16. Living Theory
Conclusion: Biography Meets History
Notes
References
Index
About the author
Michael Burawoy is a professor at the University of California, Berkeley.
Summary
Michael Burawoy has helped to reshape the theory and practice of sociology across the Western world. Public Sociology is his most thoroughgoing attempt to explore what a truly committed, engaged sociology should look like in the twenty-first century.
Burawoy looks back on the defining moments of his intellectual journey, exploring his pivotal early experiences as a researcher, such as his fieldwork in a Zambian copper mine and a Chicago factory. He recounts his time as a graduate and professor during the ideological ferment in sociology departments of the 1970s, and explores how his experiences intersected with a changing political and intellectual world up to the present. Recalling Max Weber, Burawoy argues that sociology is much more than just a discipline - it is a vocation, to be practiced everywhere and by everyone.
Report
"Michael Burawoy has written a fascinating intellectual autobiography, reconstructing the sociological canon along the way. This is a powerful call for sociology to recover its public mission."
Edward Webster, University of the Witwatersrand
"Behind Michael Burawoy's inspirational new book lies his extraordinary experiences alongside, and research into, the lives of workers in Zambia, Hungary, Russia, and Chicago. At each stop in his journey, he asks: What is this worker's life like? And how could it be? This is such a welcome and important book - read it and pass it on."
Arlie Hochschild, author of Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right
"Michael Burawoy argues for a sociology that encourages and informs critical public discussions on the preservation of our society. His illuminating personal trajectory, used as an object of analysis and placed in a wider social context, is a must-read."
William Julius Wilson, Harvard University