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Industrial Society: Requiem for a Concept

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Abstract

This paper traces the historical development as well as the analytical and ideological uses of “industrial society” as an object of knowledge. The binary opposition traditional society/industrial society and the latter tripartite division traditional, industrial, post-industrial society have been central to the development of sociology as a discipline. Like all analytical concepts “industrial society” is both a way of seeing and not seeing. It focuses attention on some social attributes and processes rather than others. The first objective of this paper is to evaluate whether or not this object of knowledge focuses attention on crucial aspects of social life, or whether, instead, it shrouds and distorts more than it reveals. The second objective is to evaluate the ideological import of the concept. Did it, and does it still, provide a realistic and achievable model of the way we ought to live together?

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Correspondence to Devereaux Kennedy.

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Kennedy, D. Industrial Society: Requiem for a Concept. Am Soc 42, 368–383 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12108-011-9135-0

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