The Making of Meaning: From the Individual to Social Order
Selections from Niklas Luhmann's Works on Semantics and Social Structure
Niklas Luhmann author Margaret Hiley translator Michael King translator Christian Morgner editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:29th Apr '22
Should be back in stock very soon
Niklas Luhmann is now widely recognized as one of the most important social theorists of the twentieth century. While several of his key texts have been translated into English significant parts of Luhmann's extensive output remain unavailable to a non-German-speaking readership. His publication in four volumes on Gesellschaftsstruktur and Semantik (Social Structure and Semantics) 1980, 1981, 1989, 1995) together constitute an important part of his work as they not only represent his contribution to a sociology of knowledge and culture, but they also set out the empirical work that underpins the development of his theory of society. In The Making of Meaning, Christian Morgner brings together Luhmann's essential ideas from the four volume series. In this work, Luhmann presents a new empirical strategy that links the production of knowledge and culture to broader societal changes and the transformation of societal complexity. This volume provides insight into the development of Luhmann's theoretical ideas, revealing how his theory was driven by a broad range of detailed historical and comparative studies. Informing a wide range of disciplines, from sociology to history, from law to business studies, from philosophy to cultural studies, The Making of Meaning stands as a major contribution to the sociology of knowledge and the social history of ideas.
By making Luhmann's theory of meaning more available to the English-reading world, Christian Morgner makes an important contribution, broadening the conversation in cultural sociology today." -Jeffrey C. Alexander, Lillian Chavenson Saden Professor of Sociology, Yale University
Christian Morgner's valuable book will prove a milestone in understanding an important part of contemporary sociological theory. It covers new ground by introducing to the anglophone reader a fresh and much broader understanding of Niklas Luhmann's multi-stranded and historically informed social theory. Bringing together newly translated parts of Luhmann's work with a wide range of its interpretation from German and other European and American scholars, the author is able to move beyond a narrow and limiting understanding of Luhmann's oeuvre as solely concerned with autopoietic systems. Morgner has done sociology a great service by rediscovering new aspects of Lumann's work and making his complex thought accessible to non-Germanic readers, without sacrificing the depth and breadth of Luhmann's work." -Christel Lane, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Cambridge
This book, edited by Christian Morgner, for the first time presents Anglophone readers with a systematic overview of Niklas Luhmann's works in the sociology of knowledge and culture, without which we cannot gain a sufficient understanding of his systems-theoretical oeuvre. Based on these texts, readers will gain insight into how Luhmann's theory is grounded on his rich knowledge of history and culture, as well as into his position in the tradition of German historical and cultural studies since Max Weber, Georg Simmel, and Ernst Cassirer. An exciting read is guaranteed!" -Takemitsu Morikawa, Professor of Sociology, Keio University
ISBN: 9780190945992
Dimensions: 240mm x 165mm x 27mm
Weight: 667g
352 pages