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June 2008

6 x 9 in.
272 pp., 4 b&w illus.

ISBN: 978-0-292-71775-6
$60.00, hardcover, no dust jacket
33% website discount: $40.20

ISBN: 978-0-292-71776-3
$24.95, paperback
33% website discount: $16.72

 
 
 
     

When the Center Is on Fire
Passionate Social Theory for Our Times

By Diane Harriford and Becky Thompson

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

"When the Center Is on Fire is a much-needed contribution to sociological understandings of contemporary U.S. society as shaped by global capital and imperialism. The authors reanimate social theory and put it to the test in imaginative and innovative ways. . . . Their readings of classical social theory help us recover a humane, life-giving, and connective social ethic that can fruitfully counteract the dehumanization, atomization, and emptiness uncovered by events that have shaken the United States in the new millennium."

—Monisha Das Gupta, University of Hawai'i, author of Unruly Immigrants: Rights, Activism and Transnational South Asian Politics in the United States

In this lively and provocative book, two feminist public sociologists turn to classical social thinkers—W. E. B. Du Bois, Max Weber, Karl Marx, and Émile Durkheim—to understand a series of twenty-first century social traumas, including the massacre at Columbine High School, the 9/11 attacks, the torture at Abu Ghraib prison, and Hurricane Katrina. Each event was overwhelming in its own right, while the relentless pace at which they occurred made it nearly impossible to absorb and interpret them in any but the most superficial ways. Yet, each uncovered social problems that cry out for our understanding and remediation.

In When the Center Is on Fire, Becky Thompson and Diane Harriford assert that classical social theorists grappled with the human condition in ways that remain profoundly relevant. They show, for example, that the loss of "double consciousness" that Du Bois identified in African Americans enabled political elites to turn a blind eye to the poverty and vulnerability of many of New Orleans's citizens. The authors' compelling, sometimes irreverent, often searing interpretations make this book essential reading for students, activists, generations X, Y, and Z, and everybody bored by the 6 o'clock news.

Diane Harriford is Associate Professor of Sociology and Director of Women's Studies at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York.

Becky Thompson is Professor of Sociology at Simmons College in Boston, Massachusetts.


 Of Related Interest Escalante Gonzalbo, In the Eyes of God
González, Anthropologists in the Public Sphere

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