Description

Book Synopsis

Mad Hazard is a memoir of the career and life of Stephen Turner, chronicling a life in social theory. Showcasing how Turner’s later work on expertise, tacit knowledge, cognitive science, leadership, and liberal democracy developed out of his early interests, this volume describes the institutional and personal constraints and pressures, as well as the personal relationships, that facilitated and shaped an academic career.

From Turner’s childhood in the racially violent South Side of Chicago, the development of his interests in social theory, through to his education in the shadow of the war in Vietnam and a period of social and personal turmoil, this biographical work shows us not only the development of academic thinking, but the evolution of an academic career. The rebellion within sociology against the hegemonic Merton-Parsons conception of sociology and the methodological orthodoxies of the time leads through to a discussion of the philosophy of science and social science, and from there to a reassessment of the inherited view of the classics, to science studies, and to political and international relations theory – the comprehensive nature of Mad Hazard means the reader can truly understand how Turner’s academic journey evolved.

Revealing an academic career not dependent on prestige and academic power, but also not untouched by hierarchy and academic politics, Mad Hazard is appealing for readers interested in the field of social theory, and beyond that, those interested in the evolution of intellectual life in the present university.



Trade Review

Anyone who is to some degree familiar with the sociological world will find something to relate to in the book, densely packed with names of academic figures institutions and associations […] the book also has its value for social scientists at an early career stage as a detailed overview of the discipline’s landscape in its rather hectic dynamics: it shows honestly what one is to expect on the path of sociology accepted as a calling.

-- Egor Novikov, International Political Anthropology

Table of Contents

Foreword; Harry F. Dahms and Robert J. Antonio
Chapter 1. Meet the Family
Chapter 2. Born into Chicago: Participant Observer in a time of Racial Succession
Chapter 3. Miami: The Quest for Normalcy at the Edge of Change
Chapter 4. Four Colleges in Fifteen Months: Higher Learning in the Sixties
Chapter 5. Tulane and New Orleans: Sociology as an Identity
Chapter 6. Semi-Graduate Student: Becoming a Theorist in a Time of Troubles
Chapter 7. Florida Forever: Surviving in a Discipline in Crisis
Chapter 8. Refugee from the War in Sociology: Conflict and Contention in Seventies Sociology and the Alternative of Philosophy of Social Science
Chapter 9. Reconstructing the Philosophical Thought of Durkheim and Weber and the Turn to Science Studies
Chapter 10. Graduate Research Professor and Divorce: Professional Crisis and the Turn to History of Sociology
Chapter 11. New Love and the Return to Philosophy: Living Beyond Disciplines in a Disciplinary World
Chapter 12. The Social Theory of Practices: Understanding Practices Naturalistically
Chapter 13. Pyrrhic Victories and a Family: Leaving the Sociology of the Nineties
Chapter 14. The Nineties, Postmodernism, Normativity and Other Controversies: Practices Between Cognitive Science and Ethics
Chapter 15. Strange Encounters in the History of Sociology and in Archives: Learning from Archives and the Politics of Collection
Chapter 16. Causal Models Again: Understanding Statistical Causality and its Problems
Chapter 17. Cognitive Science: The Mutual Implications of the Cognitive Revolution and Sociology
Chapter 18. Cleaning Up: Reconciling Normativity, Collective Intentionality, and the Brain
Chapter 19. Politics and Law: Kelsen, Weber, and the Defense of Democracy
Epilogue: Luck and the Future of Academic Thought

Mad Hazard: A Life in Social Theory

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A Hardback by Stephen Turner

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    View other formats and editions of Mad Hazard: A Life in Social Theory by Stephen Turner

    Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
    Publication Date: 08/09/2022
    ISBN13: 9781803826707, 978-1803826707
    ISBN10: 1803826703

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Mad Hazard is a memoir of the career and life of Stephen Turner, chronicling a life in social theory. Showcasing how Turner’s later work on expertise, tacit knowledge, cognitive science, leadership, and liberal democracy developed out of his early interests, this volume describes the institutional and personal constraints and pressures, as well as the personal relationships, that facilitated and shaped an academic career.

    From Turner’s childhood in the racially violent South Side of Chicago, the development of his interests in social theory, through to his education in the shadow of the war in Vietnam and a period of social and personal turmoil, this biographical work shows us not only the development of academic thinking, but the evolution of an academic career. The rebellion within sociology against the hegemonic Merton-Parsons conception of sociology and the methodological orthodoxies of the time leads through to a discussion of the philosophy of science and social science, and from there to a reassessment of the inherited view of the classics, to science studies, and to political and international relations theory – the comprehensive nature of Mad Hazard means the reader can truly understand how Turner’s academic journey evolved.

    Revealing an academic career not dependent on prestige and academic power, but also not untouched by hierarchy and academic politics, Mad Hazard is appealing for readers interested in the field of social theory, and beyond that, those interested in the evolution of intellectual life in the present university.



    Trade Review

    Anyone who is to some degree familiar with the sociological world will find something to relate to in the book, densely packed with names of academic figures institutions and associations […] the book also has its value for social scientists at an early career stage as a detailed overview of the discipline’s landscape in its rather hectic dynamics: it shows honestly what one is to expect on the path of sociology accepted as a calling.

    -- Egor Novikov, International Political Anthropology

    Table of Contents

    Foreword; Harry F. Dahms and Robert J. Antonio
    Chapter 1. Meet the Family
    Chapter 2. Born into Chicago: Participant Observer in a time of Racial Succession
    Chapter 3. Miami: The Quest for Normalcy at the Edge of Change
    Chapter 4. Four Colleges in Fifteen Months: Higher Learning in the Sixties
    Chapter 5. Tulane and New Orleans: Sociology as an Identity
    Chapter 6. Semi-Graduate Student: Becoming a Theorist in a Time of Troubles
    Chapter 7. Florida Forever: Surviving in a Discipline in Crisis
    Chapter 8. Refugee from the War in Sociology: Conflict and Contention in Seventies Sociology and the Alternative of Philosophy of Social Science
    Chapter 9. Reconstructing the Philosophical Thought of Durkheim and Weber and the Turn to Science Studies
    Chapter 10. Graduate Research Professor and Divorce: Professional Crisis and the Turn to History of Sociology
    Chapter 11. New Love and the Return to Philosophy: Living Beyond Disciplines in a Disciplinary World
    Chapter 12. The Social Theory of Practices: Understanding Practices Naturalistically
    Chapter 13. Pyrrhic Victories and a Family: Leaving the Sociology of the Nineties
    Chapter 14. The Nineties, Postmodernism, Normativity and Other Controversies: Practices Between Cognitive Science and Ethics
    Chapter 15. Strange Encounters in the History of Sociology and in Archives: Learning from Archives and the Politics of Collection
    Chapter 16. Causal Models Again: Understanding Statistical Causality and its Problems
    Chapter 17. Cognitive Science: The Mutual Implications of the Cognitive Revolution and Sociology
    Chapter 18. Cleaning Up: Reconciling Normativity, Collective Intentionality, and the Brain
    Chapter 19. Politics and Law: Kelsen, Weber, and the Defense of Democracy
    Epilogue: Luck and the Future of Academic Thought

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