Intellectuals have not historically been on the side of the oppressed but have been instrumental in developing ideologies that sustain the status quo, and The Sociological Predicament crucially asks whether academics presence on the left ultimately serves conservative ends.
A sociological phenomenon afflicts sociology itself: academics think of themselves as the vanguard of the working class despite the fact that they are not working class, as the noble willingness to side with the oppressed contrasts scholars reliance on authority to bolster their politics.
While there are no simple solutions to this contradiction, a necessary beginning is for sociologists (and other academics) to acknowledge the reality of their own class privilege as members of the professional-managerial class. The Sociological Predicament is then a conscious and deliberate work of professional self-loathing that traces the evolution of ideologies found in academia from the mid-twentieth century to today, which demonstrates the ways in which biases around class have given short shrift to the concerns of working class Americans in deindustrialized cities and towns that have ultimately turned away from and then against them.
Intellectuals have not historically been on the side of the oppressed but have been instrumental in developing ideologies that sustain the status quo, and this book crucially asks whether academics presence on the left ultimately serves conservative ends.
Preface
Introduction
1. Hierarchy
2. Against Sociology
3. A Complex Science
4. To Act or not to Act
5. The Stories we Miss
6. April 19, 2022
7. Academic Interests
8. Not Religion
9. Redneck Ethnogenesis
10. A Post-Pandemic Sociology
Epilogue
Bibliography
Alexander R. Thomas is Professor of Sociology at the State University of New York at Oneonta. Having served as faculty, in administration, and more recently as executive director of a research institute, he has seen academia from a variety of angles. He is the author or coauthor of numerous books and articles, including In Gothams Shadow, Critical Rural Theory, and City & Country.