Title: Social Theory in a Changing World
1Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Central argument Modernity can be seen as a
tension between autonomy and fragmentation - 1) Modernity as a cultural project refers to the
autonomy of the of the Subject, - the self-assertion of the self, and the
progressive expansion of the discourses of
creativity, reflexivity and discursivity. - 2) Modernity entails the experience of
fragmentation, - the sense that modernity as a social project
destroys its own cultural foundations.
2Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- The problem of mediation between agency and
structure must be theorized in terms of a theory
of culture. - Culture is to be seen as a public system of
communication. - Culture is seen as a form of social knowledge
an interpretative framework which is also a form
of action.
3Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- The modern social actor is an interpreter who
is both shaped by the prevailing cultural model
and at the same time is enabled by virtue of his
or her interpreting capactiy to act in an
autonomous manner. - It is this autonomy, which we may also term the
creativity of action, that gives social action
a political dimension.
4Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Social reality is increasingly being defined
less by the structures of economy, polity or
cultural value systems than by the cognitive
structures of communication. - In so far as knowledge and culture are
discursively mediated they are open to
contestation. - One of the hallmarks of the current situation is
the contestability of knowledge and culture.
5Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Three central developmental logics of
modernity pertain to three main communicative
domains of autonomy - The discourse of creativity
- The autonomy of the political Subject
- The discourse of reflexivity
- The autonomy of culture and knowledge
- The discourse of discursivity
- The autonomy of the social
6Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- The autonomy of the political subject
- in the sense of creative agency
- The autonomy of culture and knowledge
- inherently reflexive in its cognitive structures
- The autonomy of the social
- especially discursively structured public
communication
7Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Two poles of opposition in the construction of
the modern project - the domination of nature
- the critique of tradition
- The idea of the autonomy of the Subject was
defined - by reference to the objective world of nature as
a relation of - freedom versus determinism
8Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Modern society was a civil society,
- whose autonomy was defined against nature and
the state. - The distinctive feature of the social
- it was the mediating domain of
- social institutions, the regulated spheres of
social relations, - which lie between the objectivity and
primordiality of nature, and - an autonomous and self-legislating subjectivity
9Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- The mediating function of institutions gave rise
to the dichotomy of agency and structure and a
tension between - social action versus
- the institutional world of social structures
10Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- The divide between agency and structure - i.e.
- the autonomy of the individual,
- and the demands of society, was overcome by
- the principle of discursivity -
- the quasi-institutionalization of
- flexibly structured public communication
- this was of particular importance for the
regulation of power.
11Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Modernity located the unity of society in its
political regulation. - It was the polity - the political, juridical,
administrative and military institutions of the
state - that - ultimately secured the unity of the social.
- It is impossible to conceive the modern project,
without - the homogenizing logic of the state.
12Social Theory in a Changing World
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Delantys thesis
- Modern social relations, characterized by the
culture of publicity and civil society, entail
discursivity. - The transformation of modernity - from the
printing press to television and the internet -
can be seen as the radicalization of the
principle of discursivity and its progressive
extension to all areas of society.
13The limits of modernity
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- From autonomy to fragmentation
- The first world war undermined the promise of
the Enlightenment, and with totalitarianism the
selfconfidence of modernity comes to a final end.
- Simmels concept tragedy of culture was the
first major critique of modernity. - the loss of
autonomy and creativity because of societal
rationalization.
14The limits of modernity
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- In Dialectic of Enlightenment Adorno and
Horkheimer sought to reconcile Marxism with the
theories of Nietzsche, Weber, Mannheim, Freud. - As socity gains more and more mastery over
nature, it must exercise new forms of domination
over the Self. - Enlighenment is instrumental, binding knowledge
to power. - The ultimate expression of the history of
civilization is totalitarianism. - Popular culture, entertainment and the culture
industry was the continuation of totalitariansim
by other means.
15The limits of modernity
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Modernitys notion of universalizable personhood
has collapsed in celebration of - difference,
- the Self as context-bound, and
- multiple identity projects
- The principle that modernity derives its
legitimacy from itself, and not by reference to a
transcendental principle,is questioned - for the Self has collapsed into a variey of
projects - such as those of - creed, race and gender - which do not accept any
terms of universal reference.
16The limits of modernity
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- The fragmentation of the polity
- The function of the state is shifting from being
a providor of social goods to a regulator. - The state organized on a national basis is
increasingly unable to control financial markets,
communiction systems, international crime, and
threats to the environment. - The state is in a situation of endemic
deligitimation, which has penetrated into the
heart of civic culture.
17The limits of modernity
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- The fragmentation of the economy
- Postfordist production entails a shift away from
economies of scale to smaller and more flexible
firms. - A blurring of the divide between domestic work
and waged work. - The end of life-long and full employment
- The interpenetration of economy and culture -
production of signs rather than just objects. - Culture itself has been commodified.
18The limits of modernity
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- The fragmentation of culture
- Webers concept of disenchantment - the gradual
loss of magic because of - rationalization, secularization and
intellectualization of cultural discourses - is now rivalled by enchantment, as in -
- nationalism
- neo-fascism
- the fantasy world of cyber space
- religious revivalism
- identity projects by many social movements
19The limits of modernity
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- The functional separation of culture from
economy, polity and social relations has been
blurred - Also, the three spheres of culture
- the cognitive,
- the moral-practical (normative)
- the aesthetic-evaluative (expressivist)
- are being de-differentiated.
- Notable example the aesthetic has been extended
over the normative dimension. - The autonomy of the cognitive dimension -
knowledge as a end in itself - has vanished. - It has been instrumentalized as a result of the
new production of knowledge.
20Beyond the Classical Tradition
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Delanty emphasizes
- Culture as a mediatory category
- between structure and agency.
- Action is exercised throgh culture.
- The creativity of action
- aims to overcome the dualism of agency and
structure. - needs a broader articulation of cognitive
transformation. - Collective learning
- Evolution refers to the capacity of society to
undergo social or collective learning. - This suggests a constructivist theory of social
change. - Cognitive practice
- The social world is constructed by knowledge.
- The discursive nature of knowledge is stressed.
21Beyond the Classical Tradition
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Social theory must see the role of culture as
mediating between structure and agency - social actors - discursive agents, i.e. Cultural
producers and agents of change - Agency embodies a creative dimension
- epistemic changes - reflexivity in cultural
production - network - neither differentiation nor integration
- evolution through growth in discursive capacity
- society cannot be reduced to a particular
structure - society no longer defined by a dominant social
actor or institution. - Instead the projects of social actors are
refracted through public discourse.
22Discourse and democracy
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Habermas discursive democracy
- separation of politics from morality
- Democracy is not rooted in
- the civic community, or
- in popular sovereignty, but in
- structures of communication
23Discourse and democracy
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Habermas idea that the system colonizes the
life-world - ignores the extent of mediation between
- communicative and instrumental rationality.
- If discourse is located exclusively in the
life-world, and not in the system, - it cannot bring abourt change in the system.
24Discourse and democracy
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Discursive democracy is conceptualized in terms
of a relationship between - The public sphere rooted in the non-institutional
structure of civil society, - and the institutional processes of the
political system.
25Discourse and democracy
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Habermas takes for granted a culturally
integrated life-world, - for which all problems are external.
- The multicultural value systems in modern
societies implies that - there can be no consensus based on cultural
traditions. - The cultural turn opens up the possibility of
understanding social change, - which Habermas tends to ignore.
26Creativity and postmodernism
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Discourse in post-structuralist thought becomes
constitutive of a reality which - has no existence, except in the system of signs
of which it is composed. - This amounts to the disappearance of
the actor, and - the absorption of the social into the text.
- That is society becomes a text.
- Intertextuality refers to the thought that
- everything in the text refers to some other
part of the text not to an objective reality.
27Creativity and postmodernism
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Foucaults archaeology of knowledge or
genealogical method refers to - the investigation into the genesis of discourses
in order to demonstrate the contingency of the
discourse.
28Creativity and postmodernism
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Bauman introduces a moral dimension to
postmodern thought - Morality as responsibility for the other
constitutes an existential condition. - Morality is more fundamental to human life than
the category of the social itself.
29The return of agency
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- While postmodernism was a response to the
collapse of the social movements of modernity
(folkrörelserna), - Touraine and Melucci can be seen as responding to
the new social moevements (NSM) of the late
1960s and 1970s. - Both Touraine and Melucci address the question of
collective actors - in a way that links reflexivity to a stronger
notion of agency, - bringing social and cultural processes together.
30The return of agency
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Touraine society must be seen as a field of
social action. - Society doesnt simply reproduce itself, but
acts upon itself. - Historicity capacity for self-reflective
social action. - Post-industrial socity has increased capacity for
historicity
31The return of agency
Örjan Widegren IBV - sociologi
- Touraine is increasingly pessimistic about
the ability of social movements to bring
about social change. - The reason is the collapse of the social , as a
consequence of - the growing separation of the spheres oif
culture, personality, politics and economy. - It was the integration of these subsystems
that made industrial society into a whole an
existence sui generis.