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Paradigmen der vergleichend-historischen Methodologien: Durkheimsche vs. Weberianische Ansätze und ihre Folgen

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Sozialstruktur und Gesellschaftsanalyse
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Soziologen, die sich schon seit den 60er und 70er Jahren mit dem Thema beschäftigen, sahen mit Belustigung zu, wie ihre Kollegen in den Bereichen der freien Künste und der Geisteswissenschaften während der 90er Jahre die „Postmoderne“ und den „Dekonstruktivismus“ entdeckten. Die Soziologie ist schon seit langem „selbst-reflexiv“; eine „Soziologie der Soziologie“ und eine „reflexive Soziologie“ waren schon in den späten 60er und 70er Jahren in aller Munde. Soziologen wie (1976), (1970), (1973) und (1970) halfen uns zu verstehen, wie unerkannte Vorannahmen vielerlei Art unser Denken im Prozess der Forschung und der Theoriebildung umnebeln können. Damit warnten sie uns vor exakt denselben kulturellen und politischen Vorurteilen, von denen die heutigen „Post-Modernisten“ uns erzählen, dass wir sie „dekonstruieren“ müssten.

Übersetzung: Stefanie Osthof

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Gerd Nollmann

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Kerbo, H. (2007). Paradigmen der vergleichend-historischen Methodologien: Durkheimsche vs. Weberianische Ansätze und ihre Folgen. In: Nollmann, G. (eds) Sozialstruktur und Gesellschaftsanalyse. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-531-90324-8_7

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