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Steven Lukes on Émile Durkheim

Steven Lukes on Émile Durkheim

FromSocial Science Bites


Steven Lukes on Émile Durkheim

FromSocial Science Bites

ratings:
Length:
18 minutes
Released:
May 19, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

If anyone can lay claim to be the father of sociology, it’s Émile Durkheim. By the time of the French academic’s death in 1917, he’d produced an extraordinary body of work on an eclectic range of topics, and had become a major contributor to French intellectual life. Above all, his ambition was to establish sociology as a legitimate science.
Steven Lukes, a political and social theorist at New York University, was transfixed by Durkheim from early in his academic career -- his first major book was 1972's Emile Durkheim: His Life and Work. A Historical and Critical Study -- and has gone on to become one of the world’s leading Durkheim scholars. Of course, that’s almost a sidelight to Lukes’ own sociological theorizing, in particular his “radical” view of power that examines power in three dimensions – the overt, the covert and the power to shape desires and beliefs.”
In this Social Science Bites podcast, Lukes tells interviewer Nigel Warburton how Durkheim's exploration of issues like labor, suicide and religion proved intriguing to a young academic and enduring for an established one.
 
 
Released:
May 19, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Social Science Bites is a podcast series interviewing major figures in social science, made in association with SAGE