Redefining the Situation

The Writings of Peter McHugh

By Peter McHugh
Edited by Kieran Bonner & Stanley Raffel
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773556928, 336 pages, May 2019
Paperback : 9780773556935, 336 pages, May 2019
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773558175, May 2019
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780773558182, May 2019

The writings of a distinguished sociologist and accompanying original essays that reflect on the development of his social theory.

Description

Peter McHugh (1929–2010) was an internationally known sociologist within the field of anti-positivist social theory. As the only collection of McHugh's sole-authored writings, Redefining the Situation presents a comprehensive yet surprising view of this key theorist's influence in his field. Redefining the Situation is a compendium of McHugh's published and unpublished short-form writings, along with three new essays on McHugh's work, one by his long-time collaborator and friend Alan Blum. The collection contributes to the project of reinventing social theory by providing a new perspective from which to imaginatively rethink the development of sociology over the last fifty years. It locates McHugh's work not only within the modern and postmodern sociological tradition but also within contemporary social theory broadly, including hermeneutics, critical theory, deconstruction, and Hannah Arendt's political theory. The essays in this volume show the development of a method to analyze everyday behaviour in light of fundamental questions, exploring conflicts and connections between socialization and recidivism, fragmentation and ethnic cleansing, justice and affirmative action, teaching and university politics, and intimacy and aesthetics. This book moves beyond contemporary debates about big data/postmodernism, and along the way it identifies convergences in Anglo-American and Continental thought. By tracing the development of Analysis, the tradition of social inquiry, from its beginnings until today, Redefining the Situation re-establishes a prominent sociologist as one of the leading intellectuals in the field of interpretive social theory.

Reviews

"McHugh's work is an oasis where, by good fortune and serendipity, a new generation of exhausted sociological travellers may slake their thirst for refreshing intellectual resources to pursue deeper questions and reach towards more satisfying answers on a higher spiritual plane of ideas." Kieran Keohane, University College Cork