The Future of Agency

Between Autonomy and Heteronomy

Harry F. Dahms
Emerald
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Hardback
9781836089797
31 January 2025
£95.00
eBook (PDF)
9781836089780
31 January 2025
£95.00
eBook (ePub)
9781836089803
31 January 2025
£95.00

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

In this thought-provoking volume, leading scholars address the multifaceted concept of agency, dissecting its significance, applications, and challenges across various domains, and situate agency in changing socio-historical contexts in which individuals as members of larger groups try to reconcile guiding norms and values with the material conditions of their lives.

From sociological analyses to political explorations, the chapters traverse a rich landscape of ideas. The volume’s centerpiece (Part I) are two essays by lead authors Axel van den Berg, a prominent Canadian social theorist at McGill University in Montreal, and Emre Amasyalı, a sociologist at Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals (IBEI), along with responses by other prominent social theorists provide reactions to and assessments of the two pieces, with a reply to critics by the authors. The second and third parts do not address the concept of agency explicitly, but they do provide treatments of the larger context in which the phenomenon is situated. Part Two includes an analysis of the relevance of the category of social class via Erik Olin Wright’s reception of Max Weber and a reconstruction of how the idea of a guaranteed minimum (or basic) income can be traced alongside the history of social theory, beginning with Hegel. Part Three reflect on political transformations that have manifested in the United States in recent years, which are having a bearing on the reality of agency, and on opportunities to create documentaries in order to relay social-theoretical ideas and concepts to larger audiences.

The Future of Agency ignites intellectual curiosity, challenges assumptions, and redefines our understanding of human agency and its ever-evolving role in our complex world.

INTRODUCTION

  • Surviving (in) a World of Contradictions: Conceptualizing Agency between Autonomy and Heteronomy; Harry F. Dahms
  • PART I. THE PERSISTENT PROBLEM AND CHALLENGE OF AGENCY (SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY)
  • Chapter 1. What Do We Need ‘Agency’ for? A Critical Analysis of Reasons for the Use of ‘Agency’ in Sociology; Axel van den Berg and Emre Amasyalı
  • Chapter 2. What Do We Use ‘Agency’ for? A Critical Empirical Examination of Its Uses in the Sociological Literature; Emre Amasyalı and Axel van den Berg
  • Chapter 3. Curiously Footnoted Conceptualizations of Agency; Steven Hitlin
  • Chapter 4. Agency between Freedom/Action and Determinism/Structure: Comment on van den Berg and Amasyalı; John Levi Martin
  • Chapter 5. The Great Agency Muddle; Stephen Turner
  • Chapter 6. Why Do We Need to Discuss Agency?; Axel van den Berg and Emre Amasyalı
  • PART II. THE PROBLEM AND CHALLENGE OF AUTONOMY (CLASSICAL AND CONTEMPORARY THEORY)
  • Chapter 7. Erik Olin Wright’s Selective Interpretation of Weber and Exploitation: A Discussion and Evaluation; Sandro Segre
  • Chapter 8. A Lost Horizon: Revisiting “The Societal Rationalization of the Economy” (Translator’s Introduction); Anthony J. Knowles
  • Chapter 9. The Societal Rationalization of the Economy: Guaranteed Minimum Income as a Constitutional Right; Harry F. Dahms
  • PART III. THE PROBLEM AND CHALLENGE OF HETERONOMY (APPLIED CRITICAL THEORY)
  • Chapter 10. Authoritarianism from Below: Why and How Trump Follows His Followers; David Norman Smith and Eric Allen Hanley
  • Chapter 11. Project 2025 Environmental Policy: Post-Factual Ecocatastrophe; Robert J. Antonio
  • Chapter 12. Filmmaking as Pedagogy and Praxis: An Interview with Garry Potter; Daniel M. Harrison

Harry F. Dahms is Professor of Sociology, Co-Director of the Center for the Study of Social Justice, and Co-Chair of the Committee on Social Theory at the University of Tennessee - Knoxville. He is the editor of Current Perspectives in Social Theory and director of the International Social Theory Consortium.