
Recovering the Self: Morality and Social Theory
Author(s): Victor Jeleniewski Seidler (Author)
- Publisher: Routledge
- Publication Date: 10 Nov. 1994
- Edition: 1st
- Language: English
- Print length: 256 pages
- ISBN-10: 0415111501
- ISBN-13: 9780415111508
Book Description
This important book seeks to place questions of morality and justice at the heart of social theory. By exploring the works of Marx, Durkheim and Weber it shows the hidden complexities of a modernity too often identified with a unified vision of the rational self later to fall apart into fragments within postmodernity. Reinstating the body and emotional life, Seidler sets new terms for respect and equality showing ways the self is undermined in its sense of self-worth and adequacy through the workings of relationships of power and subordination. Drawing upon feminism and Critical Theory to question the allegedly straightforward opposition between “essentialism” and “social constructionism” Seidler places the issues of morality right into the centre of “the self problem”. Through reinstating connections between the self and the historical adventures of socialism, feminism, masculinity, ethnicity, and – autobiographically – Jewish identity, he shows the intimate affinity between these different categories of experience. Identities are not “freely chosen” but involve a coming to terms with histories of class, race and gender. Critical of postmodern theories in which anyhting goes and in which everything you see is relative, this book is concerned with the reassertion of value and recovering a viable tradition in which we can again explore issues of freedom and social justice. Our discussions have turned increasingly esoteric as they have sheltered in an intellectual cage which has been difficult to enter. This book seeks to open-up the cage and re-establish the suspended conversation between social theory and the concerns of everyday life.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“This book does a tremendously important job of bringing the issues of morality right into the core of the self problem’ thus salvaging the latter from the egocentric, hedonistic exile in which it has been kept by most recent writers.”
-Zygmunt Bauman, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Leeds University
-Zygmunt Bauman, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Leeds University
About the Author
Victor J. Seidler is Reader in Social Theory, Goldsmiths’ College, University of London.
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