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Chapter 4. Professional Status and the Moral Order
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction. Discipline and Freedom 1
-
PART I. Disciplinary Formations
- Chapter 1. Literary Study and the Modern System of the Disciplines 19
- Chapter 2. Disciplinary and Radicality: Quantum Theory and Nonclassical Thought at the Fin de Siecle, and as Philosophy of the Future 44
-
PART II. Disciplines and Professionalism
- Chapter 3. How Economics Became a Science: A Surprising Career of a Model Discipline 87
- Chapter 4. Professional Status and the Moral Order 126
- Chapter 5. Durkheim, Disciplinarity, and the "Sciences Religieuses" 153
-
PART III. Disciplines of the Self
- Chapter 6. Subjecting English and the Question of Representation 177
- Chapter 7. Dying Twice: Victorian Theories of Deja Vu 196
- Chapter 8. Oscar Wilde, Erving Goffman, and the Social Body Beautiful 219
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PART IV. Discipline and the State
- Chapter 9. Character and Pastorship in Two British "Sociological" Traditions: Organized Charity, Fabian Socialism, and the Invention of New Liberalism 235
- Chapter 10. Victorian Continuities: Early British Sociology and the Welfare of the State 261
-
PART V. Disciplinary Contests and the Present Horizon
- Chapter 11. The Arnoldian Ideal, or Culture Studies and the Problem of Nothingness 283
- Chapter 12. Notes on the Defenestration of Culture 312
- Notes on Contributors 333
- Index 337
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction. Discipline and Freedom 1
-
PART I. Disciplinary Formations
- Chapter 1. Literary Study and the Modern System of the Disciplines 19
- Chapter 2. Disciplinary and Radicality: Quantum Theory and Nonclassical Thought at the Fin de Siecle, and as Philosophy of the Future 44
-
PART II. Disciplines and Professionalism
- Chapter 3. How Economics Became a Science: A Surprising Career of a Model Discipline 87
- Chapter 4. Professional Status and the Moral Order 126
- Chapter 5. Durkheim, Disciplinarity, and the "Sciences Religieuses" 153
-
PART III. Disciplines of the Self
- Chapter 6. Subjecting English and the Question of Representation 177
- Chapter 7. Dying Twice: Victorian Theories of Deja Vu 196
- Chapter 8. Oscar Wilde, Erving Goffman, and the Social Body Beautiful 219
-
PART IV. Discipline and the State
- Chapter 9. Character and Pastorship in Two British "Sociological" Traditions: Organized Charity, Fabian Socialism, and the Invention of New Liberalism 235
- Chapter 10. Victorian Continuities: Early British Sociology and the Welfare of the State 261
-
PART V. Disciplinary Contests and the Present Horizon
- Chapter 11. The Arnoldian Ideal, or Culture Studies and the Problem of Nothingness 283
- Chapter 12. Notes on the Defenestration of Culture 312
- Notes on Contributors 333
- Index 337