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To Be or Not to Be Sociological
Methodological Ways of Seeing
To Be or Not to Be Sociological
Methodological Ways of Seeing
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Description
What does it mean to be sociological? This is not a rhetorical question since it leads to unearthing the prevalent ways of seeing in the discipline of sociology, taking notes of the content and discontent, disputes and debates. Intellectual theatrics embedded in sociology, philosophy, and history of sciences, helmed with insights and enchantment, compel us to treat methodology as a dramatically invigorating field of perceptions and practices. This book marshals such varied materials to wishfully unsettle the gingerly settled debates to curate ruptures for further explorations. Experience thus becomes an intriguing episteme and knowledge, a reflexive endeavour. The message writ large is that methodology is not, and shall not be, a finished product unless parochialism and progress have become synonymous in sociology in India and South Asia.
Table of Contents
A Provocation for Pluralism in the Way of Seeing in Sociology
Part one
Dawn
Chapter One:
The Ordinary and Extra-Ordinary in the Scheme of Sociological
Chapter Two
Persistent Precursors: Philosophical-Scientific Backdrop
Part Two
Forenoon & Afternoon
Chapter Three
Predecessors and Precursors: A Case of Sociology Before Sociology
Chapter Four
Re-turn to The Trinity: Sociological in Marx, Weber and Durkheim
Chapter Five
The Dispute(s): Science Revisited, Sociology Rethought
Chapter Six
Post-Positivist ways of Seeing: Resurgence of Experience
Part Three
Dusk
Chapter Seven
Intrigues of Experience(s): Re-turn to Reflexivity!
Chapter Eight
Diehard Devils: Myopias and Utopias in Sociology in India
Epilogue or a Wishful Monologue in the Epicentre
About the Author
Product details
Published | 30 Jan 2025 |
---|---|
Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 280 |
ISBN | 9789356409682 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic India |
Dimensions | 216 x 135 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing India Pvt. Ltd |
About the contributors
Reviews
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As an engaged teacher, creative researcher and exceptional writer, Dev Nath Pathak interrogates the culture of academic conservatism, methodological rigidity and associated intellectual insecurity prevalent amongst the priestcraft of formal and institutionalised sociology in India. The book, written with philosophical depth and heightened sensitivity, is bound to make one reflect on the efficacy of epistemological pluralism and self-reflexivity.
Avijit Pathak, Sociologist and public intellectual; former professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India
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Masterly and witty, this book is a new and wonderful addition to the pedagogical literature on sociology. It offers a genealogy of sociology's precursors, foundational thinkers, as well as critics within the discipline, who have taught generations how to see like a sociologist. The account gives space both to the raw and the cooked-the field notes and unedited reflections as well as the finished, sanitised and edited products, so that the book is one that teachers and students can equally enjoy.
Swargajyoti Gohain, Associate professor of sociology and anthropology and assistant dean of faculty, Ashoka University, Haryana, India
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A bold, provocative and sharply polemical book that, while acknowledging the scientific spirit of seeing the social world, challenges the epistemic authority of science itself. Taking a postpositivist perspective, it calls for
freeing sociology and social anthropology from their methodological rigidities and disciplinary boundaries and returning to reflexivity about the compelling phenomenon of “experience”. It brilliantly traces the historical trajectory of the “sociological”, the transition from what is considered philosophical to “social”, critiques of classical epistemology, particularly through the lenses of feminist and subaltern epistemologies, and the plurality of the ways of capturing the social. It also exemplifies how a teacher could engage with students to intellectually provoke them to chart their own pathway of knowing the world rather than mechanically following the “established” methods and techniques that have become formulae for quick academic success. In summary, this book is an important addition to the literature on methodology and is essential reading for students and practitioners of sociology, anthropology and other social science disciplines.Pushpendra, Sociologist; former professor and dean, Tata Institute of Social Sciences
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To Be or Not to Be Sociological challenges established debates and methodologies within the fields of sociology in India and South Asia. By integrating diverse materials Dev Nath Pathak provokes new lines of inquiry. He disrupts conventional approaches, implying that methodologies in sociology should remain open-ended and adaptive rather than static. The book proposes that experience itself can serve as a rich source of knowledge, encouraging a reflexive, self-critical approach to research. The book is an essential reading for students and
scholars of sociology.Satendra Kumar, Social anthropologist and senior fellow, Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies, University of Zurich, Switzerland
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Brilliant work. The narrative flows like a river. It's a genre that is trying to dismantle the cobweb of a purist's pretensions and academic arrogance. The book is a pathbreaking work for our time. Simply unputdownable.
I strongly recommend it to anyone who cares for and has interest in the world of letters and philosophy.Santosh Kumar Singh, Sociologist, poet and public intellectual; associate dean, Dr B.R. Ambedkar University Delhi, New Delhi, India

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