Roads
to Dystopia
Sociological Essays on the Postmodern Condition
Stanford M. Lyman
2002 Mid-South Sociological Association Distinguished Book Award
If the postmodern condition is a dystopia characterized
by alienation and despair, argues distinguished sociologist Stanford
Lyman, postmodern
epistemologies compound the problem by denigrating Enlightenment
philosophies that still offer agency and hope to those who struggle
to be free. In this, his sixth volume in the Studies in American
Sociology series, Lyman examines this contradiction as it has shaped
American discourses on race and community, asking why Gunnar Myrdal's "American
Dilemma" is still unresolved; how Chinese workers have fared
in the labor movement and in labor history; what searches for "the
lost tribes of Israel" have meant socially and historically;
how cinema has offered metaphors for social action but presented
failed utopias on screen; and how we have not yet established a
basic definition of "the good life." In each of these
instances, Lyman seeks new routes in the quest for justice.
2001
6" x 9"
464 pages
$39.95 cloth (s), 1-55728-711-2
Stanford M. Lyman holds the Robert J. Morrow Eminent
Scholar Professorship in Social Sciences at Florida Atlantic
University at Boca Raton and is the author of twenty-five
books as well as many essays in the social sciences.
|