Signs, Solidarities, & Sociology
Charles S. Peirce and the Pragmatics of Globalization
By (author) Blasco José Sobrinho
Publication date:
17 July 2001Length of book:
304 pagesPublisher
Rowman & Littlefield PublishersDimensions:
229x147mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9780847691791
Signs, Solidarities, & Sociology addresses the formation and fragmentation of identity in today's postmodern world. Informed by the conceptual convergence in the theories of Durkheim, Peirce, Mead, and Lacan, this book surveys the range of twentieth-century sociology to deconstruct those favored nostrums of subjective meaning, personal power, and autonomous selfhood that comprise its semantics of agency. Revealed beneath this semantic screen is the triad of pragmatic codes—premodern affiliation, modern calibration, and postmodern globalization—that govern the social construction of the self. While the ill-comprehended confluence of these three signification codes in the present world situation can indeed fragment personal identity, their formal structural linkages, as shown in this book, may inform a truly postmodern, globally applicable science of culture.
A very learned book, weaving together themes from many literatures, and must represent decades of reading and reflection. (Sobrinho) makes a valuable contribution in showing the congruence between Peirce's 'scientific realism' and Durkheim's social processes of moral and cognitive solidarity.