Nietzsche and Sociology: Prophet of Affirmation
By (Author) Anas Karzai
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
18th April 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Social and political philosophy
301.01
Hardback
248
Width 162mm, Height 229mm, Spine 25mm
558g
This book is about Friedrich Nietzsches sociological reading of modern society. Nietzsche is often represented as a philosopher, but his uniquely sociological theories and ideas have either been misunderstood or ignored in the study of modern industrial society. This work seeks to examine the reasons why Nietzsche has been ignored in sociological literature, and also shows how most classical and modern sociological thinkers, including Weber, Adorno, and Foucault, among others, have been greatly influenced by him. Marxian, Durkheimian, and Weberian sociology continue to dominate the discipline of sociology, and until now no book has adequately traced Nietzsches influence on rethinking traditional sociological theories and concepts pertaining to the examination of the present. This book provides a compelling argument as to why sociology and social theory would benefit by returning to the sociological elements in Nietzsches oeuvre as a way of better understanding the founders of sociology as well as a way of exploring the ways that Nietzsche can shed light on the present social world.
In this turbulent time in which the death of the social reveals itself in the form of increasingly violent spasms of racialized hatred and bitter cultural divisions, what could be more timely than Anas Karzais important reflections on Nietzsche as a prophet of affirmation charting a pathway of thought and practice through the complicated history that is the twenty-first century Here, the affirmative thought of Nietzsche is traced in its full dimensions, a critically engaged and eloquently written story that follows a brilliant trajectory from Comte and Durkheim to those other affirmative thinkers of modern timesFoucault, Adorno and Weber. -- Arthur Kroker, is author of, among others, The Will to Technology: Nietzsche, Heidegger, Marx, Body Drift and Exits to the Posthuman Future
Anas Karzai is lecturer in the Department of Sociology and coordinator of the criminology program at Laurentian University.