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University of California Press

About the Book

Despite immediate appearances, this book is not primarily a hermeneutical exercise in which the superiority of one interpretation of canonical texts is championed against others. Its origin lies elsewhere, near the overlap of history, psychoanalysis, aesthetics, and social theory of the usual kind. Weber, Pareto, Freud, W. I. Thomas, Max Scheler, Karl Mannheim, and many others of similar stature long ago wondered and wrote much about the interplay between societal rationalization and individual rationality, between collective furor and private psychopathology—in short, about the strange and worrisome union of “character and social structure” (to recall Gerth and Mills). Pondering the history of social thought in this century can lead to the unpleasant realization that such large-scale questions slipped away, especially from sociologists, sometime before World War II. Or, if not entirely lost, they were so transformed in range and rhetoric that a gap opened between contemporary theorizing and its European background. Perhaps this partly explains Weber’s continuing appeal. By dealing with him, one might again broach topics long at odds with “social science” of the last forty years.—From the Preface
 
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1988.
 

About the Author

Alan Sica is Professor of Sociology at the Pennsylvania State University.

Reviews

"No other commentator had interpreted Weber’s ‘irrationality problem’ with such well-documented perceptions and imaginative explications …. combining a sensitivity to the elusive, yet telling, detail; a relaxed, digressive style;, and a deep erudition…. [Sica] has accomplished a great deal by making irrationality theoretically germane. Studies of the masters of social thought rarely fuse textual and contemporary horizons so well." —Ira J. Cohen, American Political Science Review
 
"An excellent book…. Everyone who likes good theory and admires fine scholarship should read this book. The experience is like looking over the shoulder of a very good poker player who loses a hand now and then but even in failure teaches and fascinates." —Charles Lemert, American Journal of Sociology
 
"Sica has written an intriguing book that sheds much light on Weber and his legacy …. [and] is refreshingly first-personal, and remarkably free of sociologese." —Robert N. Proctor, Isis
 
"There is much of interest in this book. It is written from a perspective that recognises the importance of re-reading the classics of social thought so that they can be situated within intellectual currents broader than those currently fashionable." —Peter Lassman, Sociology