Is It Still Too Early to Tell? Rethinking Sociology’s Relations to the French Revolution

David Inglis

Is It Still Too Early to Tell? Rethinking Sociology’s Relations to the French Revolution

Číslo: 1/2018
Periodikum: Historická sociologie
ISBN: 2336-3525
DOI: 10.14712/23363525.2018.36

Klíčová slova: Revolution; French Revolution; Sociology; History; Historical Sociology; Durkheim; de Tocqueville; Revoluce; Francouzská revoluce; Sociologie; Dějiny; Historická sociologie

Pro získání musíte mít účet v Citace PRO.

Přečíst po přihlášení

Anotace: It seems almost impossible today to deny the importance of the French Revolution

in creating both the distinctively modern social world and sociology’s characteristic responses
to it. This paper takes issue with various of the standard narrations of these matters. It aims at
developing fresh thinking about what the Revolution was, and what roles it may, or may not have,
played in generating subsequent social phenomena and the sociology tasked with comprehending
them. The claim by Robert Nisbet that the roots of sociology especially lie in Conservative
responses to the Revolution are critically assessed. The potential importance of Durkheim and de
Tocqueville for creating new narrations of the connections between the Revolution and sociology
are considered. The manners in which the Revolution has been invoked to construct concepts of
“modernity” and dramatic historical breaks with the past are reflected upon.