Offering a fresh perspective, this book seeks to strengthen a better reflection on the history of sociology and social sciences in Latin America, through a reconstruction of the content and context of Gino Germani's enormous production and its legacies and legitimacies.
Gino Germanis intellectual itinerary is a key step in the understanding of sociology in Latin America. Offering a fresh perspective, this book seeks to strengthen a better reflection on the history of sociology and social sciences in the region, through a reconstruction of the content and context of his enormous production and its legacies and legitimacies.
The volume argues that Germani made a huge contribution to the development of sociology and social thought not only in Argentina and South America but also throughout Latin America, United States and Italy, with an enriching and original interdisciplinary perspective. It identifies his theoretical and conceptual proposals and empirical approach and discuss the implications of his ideas in different regional, national and local experiences and contexts. In particular they promote the prospect of comparative studies focused on different areas of the Global South.
A vital collection of work on a key thinker in Latin American Sociology for scholars and students of Sociology in the Americas and the Global South.
Preface - Gino Germani: Explorer of transitions
Introduction
1. Politics and Culture: the anti-fascist commitment of Gino Germani
(1930-1945)
2. The Return of the Self. New Constellations for Gino Germanis Sociology
3. Gino Germani's sociology in the context of accelerated change in the
university. An unfinished balance
4. Sociological knowledge in Latin America. Instrumentalization and critical
thought in Gino Germani“s ideas
5. The Committed Intellectual: Gino Germani and Totalitarianism as a Reading
Key
6. Democracy and Authoritarianism in Gino Germani
7. The Legacy of Gino Germani in Class Analysis
8. Citations in Context: References to Gino Germani's Work in the Web of
Science (1956-2024)
Conclusions
Martķn Unzué, PhD is a professor at the Universities of Buenos Aires, La Plata and Quilmes, Argentina and the Director of the Gino Germani Research Institute, University of Buenos Aires (UBA). He has worked on the return of the Gino Germani documentary collection to the UBA. His last book is about the history of the University of Buenos Aires since 1955 (Profesores, cientķficos e intelectuales. La UBA de 1955 a su Bicentenario).
Diego Ezequiel Pereyra PhD, is an associate professor in the Department of Planning and Public Policies, National University of Lanśs, Argentina. His area of research is the history of sociology and sociological traditions as a field of intersection among intellectual history, political sociology and sociology of education. He is an Independent Researcher at CONICET, based at the Gino Germani Research Institute, Universities of Buenos Aires.