Wednesday, November 15, 2017

American Sociology: Worldly Rejections of Religion and Their Directions - Book Reviews

In 1985 Yale University Press published Arthur Vidich and Stan Lyman’s book titled American Sociology: Worldly Rejections of Religion and Their Directions. One of the first review by Lewis Coser was an unfortunate “low blow” to the authors from a man who had spent a career critical of Art Vidich’s work.  Rather than finding common ground, Coser sought to find fault with the author’s assessment of the history of sociological thought – what might be called a “I am smarter than you are” attitude. 

Subsequent reviews by James Casey, James Rule, Henrika Kuklick, Stephen Baskerville, Peter Kivisto, Robert J. Antonio, James A. Beckford, Edward Gross, Susan E. Henking, J. David Hoeveler, Jr.,  Danièle Hervieu-Léger, Charles H. Page,  William H. Swatos, Jr., Joseph A. Varacalli, Edward A. Tiryakian, Jessie Bernard, Alan Sica, Gerd Kahle and Eli Zaretsky were generally favorable even though some had their own “bone to pick” about why the authors selected certain sociologists for analysis and omitted others or focused too narrowly on Puritanism in view of the variety of other Christian and Judaic influences in America.

Kuklick found the author’s analysis compelling and went so far as to suggest that their analysis should have been expanded beyond the arena of sociology to address other disciplines that have been similarly affected by the legacy of Puritanism in American social and political values. Tiryakian felt American Sociology was its best in its analysis of trends prior to World War II. The emergence of Jewish, Catholic and Black voices in latter half of the twentieth century was not addressed – an omission that Tiryakian found troubling even though he praised the authors by stating “not only is the substance of this book intrinsically interesting, but so also is the technical execution of top caliber...”

Perhaps the most compelling reviews were written by Peter Kivisto, Jessie Bernard and Edward Gross.  Kivisto offered insights in Max Weber’s theories and how these influenced the author’s analysis of American Sociology.  In contrast Bernard praised the authors for their open mindedness to heterodox conceptions of sociodicy as sources for "intellectual visions" suitable for modern societies.  Similarly, Gross lauds the authors for their emphasis on the role of sociology in offering hope of insight and light in place of the comfort and warmth of religion. After reading all of these reviews, I was impressed by the overwhelming support for the fundamental theory of sociodicy that Art Vidich and Stan Lyman set forth in this magnum opus work. Support for this important analysis of the sociological profession came both from the old scholars who were the contemporaries of Vidich and Lyman as well as from the next generation of sociologists who learned their craft from these eminent scholars.

Readers interested in an independent analysis of American Sociology will find below brief excerpts from these disparate reviews published in the American Journal of Sociology, Sociological Analysis, Theory and Society, The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, History, The British Journal of Sociology, Symbolic Interaction, Sociology, Bulletin of Sociological Methodology, The Journal of Religion, The American Historical Review, Archives de sciences sociales des religions,  Contemporary Sociology, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, the Review of Religious Research, American Journal of Education, Sociological Forum, Science, Zeitschrift für Politik and Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences.
    1.      Review by Lewis Coser (1913-2003)
Having myself defended heterodox ideas about the past and the present of sociology, I approached American Sociology with favorable anticipation. Alas, this proved to be unwarranted.
Lewis Coser, American Journal of Sociology, Volume 91, Number 5, March 1986, pp. 1231-1232.

Blog Author’s Historical Comment:  It is worthy of note that Lewis Coser’s worldviews received unflattering treatment in Vidich and Lyman’s book and therefore his review of this book appears to reflects a disgruntled critic nursing a long term tête-à-tête with the authors.

     2.      Review by James T. Casey
“The authors argue that the failure of the Puritan goal to establish the kingdom of God on earth did not lead, in later sociological thought, to the rejection of that kingdom, but rather to its secularization-it was to be a kingdom without God. I would take issue with some of the authors' arguments. They see sociology's development in the United States as working through questions bequeathed by our Puritan heritage. It was most certainly more of a reflection of what was happening on the Continent as well. Others might take issue with Vidich's and Lyman's neglect or dismissal of some sociological giants, but I think their fundamental thesis is provocatively stated and suggests that now that we've exorcised our Puritan past we are ready to develop a science of society appropriate for a modern industrial age.”
James T. Casey, Sociological Analysis, Volume 48, Number 1, Spring 1987, pp. 91-93

    3.      Review by James Rule (1943-)
“This is an idiosyncratic and provocative book. The authors hold that the history of American sociology is to be understood as a quest for secular substitutes for an earlier world-view shaped by Puritan theology. At best, this is an illuminating look at intellectual and cultural forces whose role in shaping the study of society have been poorly understood. At worst, it is a one argument book whose single argument is made to carry more weight than it can bear.”
James Rule, Theory and Society, Volume 17, Number 1, January 1988, pp. 147-151

   4.      Review by Henrika Kuklick (1942-2013)
Like other disciplines, sociology has a history rich with incidents that its present practitioners would rather not remember, some of which its founding fathers concealed. If you delight in revelations of such incidents, you will enjoy this book. The expose form of this book follows from the authors' concern to define the distinctive national character of American sociology, and to explain this character as a function of the intolerant Protestantism of the discipline's founders. The theme of the book is an eccentric variation on a familiar argument: because American sociology was developed by persons who were either former ministers or men of the social type who would have become clergymen in earlier times, the discipline translated Protestantism's concerns for worldly reform into secular terms, seeing social scientific research as worthwhile because it could be used to improve the lot of humankind. Unlike other historians of sociology, however, they stress the Protestant tradition of conceiving the polity as a covenant between God and the citizenry, representing normative social theories as secularized prescriptions for the realization of the covenant.
Henrika Kuklick, The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Volume 18, No. 3, Winter 1988, pp. 556-557

     5.      Review by Stephen Baskerville (1950- )
Their central thesis is that American sociologists in the mainstream of this evolutionary progression 'transvalued' the theological ethics of Protestant Christianity, and Social Gospel movement, into a set of equally teleological, a priori, assumptions about the 'purpose' of human existence and the perfectibility of human beings in society.  The main problem with the theological motif is that, whereas several of the sociologist considered were avowedly influenced by Protestant associations and values, others, doubtless the majority after the First World War, were not…
….Vidich and Lyman are alone in trying to set the substance of sociological research within a meaningful and intellectual development. Their study is worth reading if only for the range and significance of the issues it raises.
Stephen Baskerville, History, Vol. 71, No. 233, October 1986, pp. 468-470

    6.      Review by Peter Kivisto (1949- )
The book is clearly not an apologia for sociology, but neither is it a condemnation of the entire enterprise. Rather, it is a sustained and careful critique from the vantage of two senior scholars who are, simply put, 'for sociology’. To better understand their complaints with sociological orthodoxy, it is useful to identify who among the heterodox they identify with as well as to determine what it is about the work of these thinkers that suggests a promising basis for an alternative sociological vision. Rather than eschewing any effort aimed at contributing to social change, they offer the possibility of constructing a new sociodicy. The task in a post-Puritan America is to build upon their work in the process of constructing an appropriate sociodicy, one that meets the demands of the day in our errand in the industrial wilderness. Seen in this light, this exceptional book is a prolegomenon to that task.

Conceived as 'neither a history nor an exegesis' (Vidich and Lyman 1985: xi), the book is, instead, a hermeneutic effort to ferret out the linkages between Protestantism and the variegated forms of sociology that took root in American soil. Underpinning it is a conviction that it is impossible to simply cast off the cloak of one's culture at will. Though not made quite so explicit, it seems to me that this assumption serves to distinguish this analysis from more conventional treatments, which tend to treat the history of the discipline as entailing a unilinear progressive emancipation from religion. Put another way, the book casts doubt on the belief, held not merely by American sociologists, but by Enlightenment intellectuals in general: namely, that it was possible to illumine the world, to construct a world free from myth, by severing any connectedness from tradition.

 Peter Kivisto, The British Journal of Sociology, Vol. 38, No. 1 (Mar., 1987), pp. 112-120
    7.      Review by Robert J. Antonio (1945- )
Vidich and Lyman contend that functionalism and statistical sociology were components of a single paradigm that provided a rationale for technocratic practice. Functionalism provides an inner-worldly substitute (institutionalized value patterns) for other-worldly religious belief. In the Rational Society redemption is the outcome of sociologically enlightened state policy making, which perfects social structure in the image of its immanent Protestant value pattern. Vidich and Lyman brand this technocratic “sociodicy” as eviscerated theology.
The sociological “establishment” has weathered many assaults over the past twenty five years and will undoubtedly survive this one. On the other hand, this book points to cracks in its foundation. Despite its limitations, American Sociology deserves attention because it raises dramatically a most important intellectual problem. It declares that the Protestant value base of mid-twentieth century American society is in ruins. For this reason. Vidich and Lyman are in direct opposition to neo-functionalist efforts to shore up the old liberal meta-theoretic edifice. American Sociology points explicitly to the bankruptcy of technocratic liberalism.
 The genius of American Sociology is the argument that the course of secularization ultimately returns science and society to their subjective moorings. In the end the good ship has already set sail for the life-world and public philosophy. Vidich and Lyman, however, overestimate Protestantism’s contribution to the present crisis and consequently exaggerate the positive cultural consequences of its decline. Claims about the pacifying effects of secularization must be conditioned by a much deeper analysis of culture and technocracy and broader consideration of the Enlightenment tradition and political economy.
Robert J. Antonio, Symbolic Interaction, Vol. 9, No. 2 (Fall 1986), pp. 259-265

v  8.      Review by James A. Beckford (1942- )
If you have ever wondered how the USA, the hot-house of many varieties of individualism, also became a veritable laboratory of scientifically engineered collectivisms, you will find Vidich and Lyman's book an invaluable source of solutions. The central thesis is that strains of Protestant meliorism and reformism were mixed with versions of Comtean evolutionism to produce distinctive visions of perfectible communities of free individuals.

Thus, beginning with ante-bellum theorists of a slavery-based society and concluding with Bellah-inspired pleas for the restoration of a sacred covenant between the American people and their many gods, this scholarly and readable book charts the trajectory of American sociology's twin origins in Protestantism and science. The sub-title misleadingly implies a unilinear trend away from the former towards the latter, but both personal experience and much of Vidich and Lyman's own material convince me that American sociology continues to hold Protestantism and science in an uneasy yet creative, tension.

But the originality of their book lies in its relentless, and absorbing, documentation of the many- sided connection between the Christian religion and the problematics of classical American sociology. The history of sociology was badly in need of their irreverence and iconoclasm. Perhaps the decline of hagiography is another indicator of secularization.
James A. Beckford, Sociology, Vol. 20, No. 1 (February 1986), pp. 158-159

    9.      Review by Bulletin of Sociological Methodology
This book is the first historical study by senior scholars that attempts to rewrite the discipline’s first century by putting forward a powerful thesis. The authors do not write from a predominantly political angle. Rather, they have taken an idea from Max Weber's sociology of religion and tried to show that (American) sociology, until very recently, was religion by another name.
Bulletin of Sociological Methodology / Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique, No. 9 (January, 1986), pp. 56-57

    10.  Review by Edward Gross (1921-2013)
In their social and intellectual history of American sociology, Vidich and Lyman seek to tell us not only what various sociological theorists and schools have contributed but to do something more difficult and more revealing. They argue that whatever their differences, theorists have been engaged in a search for ways in which it might be possible to substitute “a language of science for the rhetoric of religion.” Even when they turned their backs on society and rejected any role in government, sociologists, with their roots in Protestant religion, could not stop themselves from seeking ways to form a better, even a utopian, social world. For myself - thinking of the special interest of the journal - I had intended only to skim the first 150 pages that precede the discussion of Chicago sociology and the symbolic interactionists. But, once started, 1 found myself reading the whole book from start to finish, almost in a single sitting. Students should have the same experience, not the least reason being the exposure to an unusually high caliber of sophisticated, parsimonious, and elegant style of writing.
But if we look more deeply into the thesis that the authors advance, something additional is revealed. They give us not only a brilliant light on this history of American sociology but provide us with what Lyman, in one of his seminal articles, refers to as an “account” of that history. We are told not only what sociologists had to say about society and what sort of vision they brought to their work but why they offered it. We see them as seeking unceasingly not only to “do” sociology but to offer justifications for the sociological way of seeing the world and of its potential for carving meaning in what seems a fragmented, anomic, desperate world. Perhaps the crowning justification is still the towering Durkheimian achievement in showing that even the ultimate rejection of life itself, suicide, is socially structured.

One final recollection is worth making, this one from Louis Wirth. He was fond, in his elementary theory course, of offering his own justification of sociology. He posed a scene in which a man was lying unconscious on the street. A medical person could test for signs of life; a psychologist could test for reflexes. But what could a sociologist do, being interested only in the group? A sociologist, said Wirth, could start going through the man’s pockets, where documents would speak to his family attachments, his citizenship and community rights, memberships, and other indications of wealth and status, all generating far more information than other scientists might give us. I believe it was Park who said that a person’s memberships and affiliations make up much of his identity and the whole of his obituary. The loss of religion that Vidich and Lyman describe with such intensity has, on balance, yielded a sociology that is no substitute for the abandoned religion and cannot offer any hope of such a religion. But in place of the comfort and warmth that have been lost, sociology offers the hope of insight and light. The question of whether that justification is sufficient can only be answered by sociological research itself.
Edward Gross, Symbolic Interaction, Vol. 9, No. 2 (Fall 1986), pp. 265-268

    11.  Review by Susan E. Henking (1955- )
This volume is a welcome addition to literature on the place of religion in the history of the human sciences, in particular to that literature that identifies connections between American Protestantism and the discipline of sociology as institutionalized in the United States. In it, Arthur J. Vidich and Stanford M. Lyman provide a synopsis of sociological ideas ranging from antebellum pro-slavery systems to such contemporary varieties of sociological endeavor as social systems theories, neo-Marxism, and the work of Erving Goffman.

Unfortunately, this depiction of the connections between Protestantism and sociology is not fully satisfactory for the student of religion. Vidich and Lyman are clearly neither theologians nor historians of American religion, and, hence, their attention to the theologies and movements of Protestantism does not match the subtlety of their presentation of sociological ideas. Seen through their eyes, American Protestantism is substantially more monolithic than American sociology.
A final flaw, somewhat startling given the professional identifications of the authors, is the emphasis on ideas almost to the exclusion of institutional interactions. The authors point to the formative role of structural transformations of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century American society, yet they virtually ignore institutional connections between religion and sociology evident in the history of the discipline and the relevance, for example, of sociological analysis of disciplinary formation and professionalization for their topic. This is perhaps not surprising given the Weberian flavor of the work, but it is disappointing.
Susan E. Henking, The Journal of Religion, Vol. 67, No. 1 (Jan., 1987), pp. 140-141

    12.  Review by J. David Hoeveler, Jr. (1943- )
American sociology is replete with the language of Protestantism, and unquestionably many of its tenets are the secular variants of inherited religious views of life. The authors make this pattern clear in some convincing and useful chapters, especially those dealing with Giddings, Talcott Parsons, and Albion Small. In these sections the evidence is more carefully marshaled and more concrete; the authors are not left to apply a priori a mechanistic framework to their subjects.
J. David Hoeveler, Jr., The American Historical Review, Vol. 91, No. 1 (Feb., 1986), pp. 215-216

    13.  Review by Danièle Hervieu-Léger (1947- )
This French language review praises Vidich and Lyman’s work for its insights in American social science. He contends that the author provide an exceptional analysis of the role of religion in American sociology.
Danièle Hervieu-Léger, Archives de sciences sociales des religions, 32e Année, No. 64.2 (Jul. - Dec., 1987), p.348

    14.  Review by Charles H. Page (1910-1992)
The "secular covenant," the role of the state, and the "civil covenant," the authors contend, have been the guiding concerns of "virtually all" American sociologists from the outset. Although some of these influences - for example, Midwestern Progressivism and the rise of the counter- culture in California-are attended to by Vidich and Lyman, their rewriting of the history of American sociology comes close to a religious determinism that goes far beyond the constraints of Weber's classic. However legitimate these criticisms may be (of course they reflect my own biases), I strongly recommend this erudite, provocative, and indeed enchanting book to all serious students of American sociology. Those who fail to read it will be losers.
Charles H. Page, Contemporary Sociology, Vol. 15, No. 2 (Mar., 1986), pp. 209-211

    15.  Review by William H. Swatos, Jr. (1946- )
The book can be assessed at many levels. With regard to the straightforward thesis that early American sociology reflected in many ways the social and cultural systems of its founders who had entirely been reared in Protestantism, the argument is overwhelmingly compelling. But why should we expect otherwise? American culture was permeated by a Protestant worldview, and social science intellectuals just as all American intellectuals in this period – were largely the produce of that worldview, whether they thought they were or not. This has clearly shaped the agendas not only of sociology but also of all other disciplines practiced in the United States to some degree or another. To the extent that sociologists are unaware of this heritage, the book makes a valuable contribution. Particularly important, though not to be overemphasized, in this connection is their forthright treatment of the earliest uses of sociology in this country in the context of the justification and maintenance of Afro-American slavery, a fact too often suppressed in disciplinary histories: The authors skillfully use the "race problem" as illustrative of the salvationist character of American sociology. The book is so persuasively written that it is tempting to swallow it whole. In fact, it needs careful dissection, with the various strands that are bundled together teased out to see whether or not they provide the sustenance claimed for them. The compelling thesis that establishment sociology in America perpetuated establishment ideology when establishment theology became intellectually bankrupt can be maintained without forcing early American sociology to lie on a Procrustean bed.
William H. Swatos, Jr., Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Vol. 25, No. 2 (Jun., 1986), pp. 261-262

    16.  Review by Joseph A. Varacalli (1952- )
The Vidich and Lyman volume provides a powerful, scholarly, lucid, useful, and "neat" (perhaps a bit too neat) interpretation of the emergence and subsequent evolution of American sociology. The authors argue that the foundations of American sociology, from the Civil War through roughly World War I, were significantly (not totally) based on American Protestant theology, especially that of the "Social Gospel" which was concerned with establishing the Kingdom of God on earth.  In large part, American sociologists, at least until the anomic and alienating 1960's, had thus retained the original spirit of Protestant world salvation by translating the idea of the sacred Puritan covenant into that of a utopian, secular civil society in which the science of sociology would provide authoritative grounds for America's moral redemption. That no sociodicy is capable of serving as the functional equivalent of a theodicy is an issue that the authors leave unaddressed.
One final and significant assumption must be brought to the fore: in accepting Weber's understanding that the Occident is undergoing a pervasive rationalization and secularization of thought, Vidich and Lyman eliminate, by fiat, any possible positive integrative role for religion in modern society and in the construction of sociological theories. Whether the authors have tapped correctly an irreversible historical watershed in the relationship of man to the universe or whether their analysis suffers from a secular myopia generated, in part, by their immersion in the milieu of the New School for Social Research remains to be seen.
Joseph A. Varacalli, Review of Religious Research, Vol. 29, No. 3 (Mar., 1988), pp. 306-307

   17.  Review by Edward A. Tiryakian (1921- )
Briefly, American Sociology is at its best in examining the pre-World War II interplay in the United States between the development of sociology and the Protestant/Puritan cultural matrix. The geographical or regional coverage is wider than that in most accounts, since Vidich and Lyman examine early southern sociology as well as the important ‘nativistic’ Midwestern setting and also the California setting of sociology, the latter a sort of crossroads between southern and eastern influences that produced some important innovations. Not only is the substance of this book intrinsically interesting, but so also is the technical execution of top caliber, with historical inaccuracies and typographical mistakes virtually absent, making for solid reading pleasure.

Perhaps, in the spirit of Weber's analysis, we should say that, for American sociology, the search for a this-worldly sociodicy has been more important than finding it-or, as Lessing once pointed out, the search for truth is more bearable than finding it. Vidich and Lyman have provided us with a good search of the deep structures of American sociology, but there are other diggings to be done before we get to the roots of our contemporary situation. In any case, for their search we are thankful.
Edward A. Tiryakian, American Journal of Education, Vol. 95, No. 2 (Feb., 1987), pp. 375-378

    18.  Review by Jessie Bernard (1903-1996)
When justice was removed from sociology, when both theodicy and sociodicy were wiped off its slate, when only the "logy" (or science or means) component remained that could be used for any end, or by anyone or anything, something critical happened to the discipline. It became less and less a liberal art or one of the humanities and more and more a professional technological skill available to anyone who could pay for it. "Thereafter sociology turned away from a vision of the ends [justice] and toward an unstinting effort to improve the means (methods)" (288). In this effort it was spectacularly successful. As a dedicated sociologist who wants to see her discipline become as good as possible, I welcome this. As Vidich and Lyman seem also to do. For, as noted at the beginning of this essay, they look to heterodoxies as sources for "intellectual visions" of sociodicies suitable for modern societies (307). Feminism is one such heterodoxy. As a feminist I am happy to be engaged in this enterprise.
Jessie Bernard, Sociological Forum, Vol. 1, No. 3 (Summer 1986), pp. 525-535

    19.  Review by Alan Sica (1949-)
This is… a valuable book, for its bibliographical mining, its strong thesis, the unusually clear writing, and the scholarly gravity-especially now when sociology has reached dire straits and needs, perhaps, to look backward before mastering the future. Yet it is not about American sociology altogether. It is more a monograph that highlights the place of religious thinking and feeling in selected works of some American intellectuals, most of whom have passed into quiet oblivion precisely because their ideas became utterly antique. It is not quite accurate to equate or merge true theodicy with today's sociodicy.
Alan Sica, Science, New Series, Vol. 229, No. 4719 (Sep. 20, 1985), pp. 1255-1257

    20.  Review by Gerd Kahle
Kahle’s review is printed in German and explains how this book reflects the history of American sociology.
Gerd Kahle, Zeitschrift für Politik, NEUE FOLGE, Vol. 35, No. 2 (Juni 1988), pp. 215-217

    21.  Review by Eli Zaretsky (1940-)
If the purpose of this work was to establish that there were many important connections between Protestant thought, both in its evangelical and its earlier Puritan incarnations, and sociology, especially in its early phases, then the work must be considered a success. Among the Protestant themes that the authors discern in American sociology are the idea of a saving elite (saints, social scientists), the idea of civil society as a moral covenant or brotherhood, the need to justify the existence of evil or suffering (theodicy, sociodicy) as well concurrent longings toward perfectionism, utopianism, and perfect management.

But if the authors' intention was to offer an overall interpretation of American sociology, as their title suggests, the book must be judged a failure. There are several reasons for this. First, simply to link a body of modern social thought to religion is to state a truism. Human beings are moral creatures with moral feelings about themselves and others. Ever since the first millennium B.C., and in certain ways much earlier, the basic framework for thinking about human life has been religious. Only in the nineteenth century, the intellectual history of which is dominated by the process of secularization, did this begin to change. Simply linking secular thought to religious thought tells us nothing; there are implications to this link that the authors never draw.

In spite of these criticisms, this remains an important work for all students of the history of the behavioral sciences. American sociology is a unique tradition; whatever its connections with classical European social theory it comes deeply out of the American reform tradition and nineteenth-century American thought. This tradition was, at its core, evangelical Protestantism in its ambivalent relationship to market individualism and the spread of corporate capitalism. The authors have made an important contribution in pointing to the existence of this connection. Unfortunately, the real task of specifying its nature and evaluating its meaning do not seem to have been considered by the distinguished authors of this study.
Eli Zaretsky, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, Volume 22. October 1986, pp. 382-3

Professors Vidich and Lyman Respond To Zaretsky:
The reviewer misstates the theme of the work and thus has been led into judging it "a failure" for not offering "an overall interpretation of American sociology." Our book is an examination of American sociological knowledge, with a specific focus on the trans-valuation of the rhetorics of that knowledge from religious to scientific terminologies. By "usurping the traditional position of theology," sociologists have taken God's work (we believe unwittingly) out of His hands and put it ever so confidently into their own. The search for secular solutions to problems of theodicy has pushed American sociology into a wide variety of applied and social work directions, leading it to formulate sociodicies for any and all social problems. Our book examines the consequences and the directions taken by American sociology as a result of its commitment to the cure of souls and the perfection of society. It does not proceed as "conventional intellectual history" nor does it "follow Edward Shils's lead in organizing [its] material 'ecologically.' “Insofar as our book traces sociological developments in specific schools and regions of the United States, it stands as a corrective to Shils's study. The authors and schools we selected for treatment were purposefully chosen to cover the full range of theoretical problems confronting the field, in areas such as self-formation, community, race relations, stratification, work, industrialization, mass phenomena, social movements, the state, and the moral foundations of social order. They cover the entire history of American sociology from 1854 to the present. That less attention is paid to some thinkers, as, for example, W. I. Thomas and Charles Horton Cooley, is fully explained and justified in the text (pp. 145, 146, 180, 195, 206, 210; 57, 153, 164) and accords with the thematic of our project. It is wrong to claim that we do not given attention to George Herbert Mead (see pp. 270-272). The reviewer has not grasped the argument of our book. Our position is that the heritage of Protestantism has not provided sociology with an adequate public philosophy for comprehending, let alone ameliorating, the problems of a secularized society. The reviewer's view of Robert Bellah's exhortation, that sociology should "live up to its responsibilities," is not our own, but an unsupported quasi-secular canopy covering up contemporary sociology's embarrassing lack of new clothes. If it were true that "to link a body of modern social thought to religion is to state a truism," all criticism would be superfluous. It is tendentious trivializing to assert that "ever since the first millennium B.C., and in certain ways much earlier, the basic framework for thinking about human life has been religious." That statement misses our point: Protestant thinking has had a special and limiting effect on American sociology's capacity to think about American society and its human life.
Vidich & Lyman, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, Volume 22. October 1986, pp. 384



Monday, November 13, 2017

German White Collar Workers and the Rise of Hitler

In 1986 Arthur Vidich prepared the introduction to Hans Speier's classic work, German White Collar Workers and the rise of Hitler. While this book may be relatively unknown to most Americans and even to most sociologists, it is an exceptionally important analysis of the factors that led to Hitler's rise to power in the 1930s.  The social, economic and political changes that enabled fascism to emerge in Germany after World War I have an uncanny resemblance to the transformations occurring within American society today. Arthur Vidich and Hans Speier were colleagues at the New School for Social Research and their relationship enabled Vidich to gain important insights into fascism's roots which strongly influenced some of his later writing on nativism in America.  In his introduction to Speier's book Vidich asked a key question: "Is fascist governance an intrinsic possibility in the democratic West?" While it may seem counter-intuitive for white collar workers to be enablers of fascism, Speier clearly shows how Germany's salaried white collar workers were easily manipulated by Hitler's National Socialist German Workers' Party after years of economic depression, loss of prestige and general moral malaise following the nation's devastating defeat in World War I.  Speier's book, although out of print, remains a classic analysis of the causes of fascism. Its trenchant analysis of the social and economic forces that enabled the rise of Hitler, should be must reading for any American concerned with the fascist tendencies that have surfaced in the post-Obama era of American government. 

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

CURRICULUM VITAE
ARTHUR J. VIDICH

EDUCATION

Ph.D. Harvard University, 1953
University College, University of London, Fulbright Scholar, 1950-51
M.A. University of Wisconsin, 1948
U.S. Marine Corps, 1942-1946 (Guam, Saipan, Japan)
B.A. University of Michigan, 1943
University of Wisconsin, 1940-1942


PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS

Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Anthropology, Department of Sociology New School for Social Research, Graduate Faculty, 1992-2006
Professor of Sociology and Anthropology, Department of Sociology New School for Social Research, Graduate Faculty, 1960-1992
Chairman, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, New School for Social Research, Graduate Faculty, 1964-1969, Acting Chairman Department of Sociology, 1970-1973, 1975-1976; Chairman, 1978-85
Distinguished Visiting Professor, State University of New York, New Paltz, March 2-6, 1981 and May 4-15, 1981
Breman Professor of Social Relations, University of North Carolina, Asheville, July 7-August 10, 1979
Distinguished Lecturer, Kyoto-American Studies Seminar, Kyoto, Japan, Summer 1978
Visiting Professor, University of California, San Diego, Department of Sociology, September-December, 1977
Senior Fulbright Lecturer, University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia, June 1973-January 1974
Visiting Professor, New College, Sarasota, Florida, 1969-1970
Visiting Professor, Clark University, Spring, 1963, 1964, 1966
Visiting Professor of Sociology, Universidad Nacional, Bogota, Colombia, 1964
Visiting Associate, Florence Heller Graduate School for Advanced Studies in Social Welfare, Brandeis University, 1960-1966
Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Connecticut, 1957-1960
Associate Professor, College of Social Sciences, University of Puerto Rico, 1954 -1957.
Assistant Professor and Resident Field Director, Cornell University, 1951-1954

BOOKS PUBLISHED

POLITICAL FACTIONALISM IN PALAU: ITS RISE AND DEVELOPMENT, N.S.F.-C.I.M.A. Report 23, Washington, D.C. 1949,  http://openlibrary.org/b/OL17110205M

SMALL TOWN IN MASS SOCIETY, Princeton, 1958, revised edition. 1968 (co-author), Spanish edition, Direcclon General de Publicaclones, Universidad National Autonoma de Mexico, 1975

IDENTITY AND ANXIETY, Free Press, 1960 (co-author)

SOCIOLOGY ON TRIAL, Prentice-Hall, 1963 (co-author); Italian edition, Sociologia Alla Prova. Roma 1969, Armando Editore

REFLECTIONS ON COMMUNITY STUDIES, John Wiley and Sons, 1964 (co-author). Harper Torchbook Edition, 1972
http://www.alibris.com/search/books/qwork/5611515/used/Reflections%20on%20community%20studies

THE METHOD AND THEORY OF ETHNOLOGY, Paul Radin. edited with an introduction, pp. vii-cxv. Basic Books, 1966
https://www.alibris.co.uk/search/books/qwork/4322454/used/The%20method%20and%20theory%20of%20ethnology%3B%20an%20essay%20in%20criticism.

THE NEW AMERICAN SOCIETY, Quadrangle, The New York Time Book Company, 1971 (co-author) (3 Editions Published)

METROPOLITAN COMMUNITIES: NEW FORMS OF URBAN SUB-COMMUNITIES, Franklin-Watts, 1975 (co-author). New York

CONFLICT AND CONTROL: LEGITIMACY PROBLEMS OF MODERN GOVERNMENTS, Sage, 1979 (co-author)

THE POLITICAL IMPACT OF COLONIAL ADMINISTRATION, Arno Press, 1980
http://www.amazon.com/Political-Colonial-Administration-Dissertations-sociology/dp/0405130031

POLITICS, CHARACTER AND CULTURE; PERSPECTIVES FROM HANS GERTH, Greenwood Press, 1982 (co-author)
http://www.amazon.com/Politics-Character-Culture-Perspectives-Contributions/dp/0313228639

AMERICAN SOCIETY: THE WELFARE STATE AND BEYOND. Bergin and Garvey; South Hadley, MA. Second Edition with a new Foreword and two additional chapters Of THE NEW AMERICAN SOCIETY: THE REVOLUTION OF THE MIDDLE CLASSES (with Joseph Bensman), 1986.

THE METHOD AND THEORY OF ETHNOLOGY (Paul Radin), Introduction and concluding chapter by Arthur J. Vidich. Bergin and Garvey; South Hadley, MA. 1987.

TOWARDS A PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY FOR SOCIOLOGY: ESSAYS BY HERBERT BLUMER. Introduction and Conclusion by Stanford M. Lyman and Arthur J. Vidich. University of Arkansas Press. 1988.

AMERICAN SOCIOLOGY: WORLDLY REJECTIONS OF RELIGION AND THEIR DIRECTIONS. Yale University Press; New Haven, CT (with Stanford M. Lyman), 1986. (Serbo-Croatian edition in translation, 1991)

THE ETHNIC QUEST FOR COMMUNITY; SEARCHING FOR ROOTS IN THE LONELY CROWD. Edited with Michael Hughey. J.A.I. Press, 1993.

KARL MARX: CATALYST OF MODERN THOUGHT, Collected essays of Marx. Engels, Veblen. Laski, Small, Weber, Heimann, Lederer, Schumpeter, Lowe, and Parsons. Edited with Harry Dahms (forthcoming).


THE NEW MIDDLE CLASSES SOCIAL, PSYCHOLOGICAL, AND POLITICAL ISSUES, New York, NY. New York University Press, 1994 http://www.nyupress.org/books/The_New_Middle_Classes-products_id-975.html

THE NEW MIDDLE CLASSES: LIFESTYLES STATUS CLAIMS AND POLITICAL ORIENTATIONS, N.Y., New York University Press and Macmillan International, 1995; a volume in the series. Main Trends in the Modem Epoch.

COLLABORATION, REPUTATION, AND ETHICS IN AMERICAN ACADEMIC LIFE: HANS H. GERTH AND C. WRIGHT MILLS, Urbana, IL, University of Illinois Press, 1999 (co-author Guy Oakes)

SELECTED WORKS OF HERBERT BLUMER: A PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY FOR MASS SOCIETY. Urbana, IL, University of Illinois Press, 2000 (with S.M. Lyman) http://www.getcited.org/pub/100447407

WITH A CRITICAL EYE, AN INTELLECTUAL AND HIS TIMES, Knoxville, TN, Newfound Press, 2009, Edited and introduced by Robert Jackall

PUBLICATIONS

1949 Political Factionalism in Palau; Its Rise and Development. Research study submitted to the National Research Council. Published and distributed to selected libraries by the Wenner-Gren Foundation.

1954 "The Validity of Field Data," (co-author). HUMAN ORGANIZATION, Vol. 13, No. 1, Spring. Reprinted in HUMAN ORGANIZATION RESEARCH, Dorsey Press, 1960. Reprinted in REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES, Spring, 1957.

1955 "Participant Observation and the Collection and Interpretation of Data," AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, Vol. 60, No. 4, January 1955: 354-360: DOI: 10.1086/221567

"A Comparison of Participant Observation and Survey Data," AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, Vol. 20, No. 1, February 1955: 28-33 (co-author).

1956 "Methodological Problems in the Observation of Husband-Wife Interaction," MARRIAGE AND FAMILY LIVING, Vol. 18, No. 3. Augusut 1955: 234-239
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/347211

1957 "Social Role of the Anthropological Advisor," AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST,
Vol. 59. No. 5, 1957: 878-883 . http://www.jstor.org/pss/665854

"The Future of Community Life: A Case Study and Reflections, (co-author) In PSYCHOANALYSIS AND THE FUTURE, National Psychological Association for Psychoanalysis, Inc., New York, January 1957, pp. 57-84.

"Farmer in the Trap," (co-author), NATION, May 3. 1957. http://www.since1865.com/archive/detail/13399951

1958 SMALL TOWN IN MASS SOCIETY, CLASS, POWER AND TOE RELIGION IN A RURAL COMMUNITY (co-author), Princeton Press. Anchor Paperback edition, 1960.

Sections of SMALL TOWN AND MASS SOCIETY have been reprinted as follows:

"Village Politics", In DEMOCRACY IN URBAN AMERICA, 0. Williams and C. Press (eds.), Rand McNally. 1961.

"The Politics of the Small Community". In MODERN SOCIOLOGY. Gouldner and Gouldner (eds.), Harcourt Brace. 1963.

"The Small Town" reprinted in PERSPECTIVES ON TOE SOCIAL ORDER. H.L. ROSS, (ed.), McGraw-Hill. 1963.

"Springdale and the Mass Society", in LIFE IN SOCIETY. Lasswell, Burma and Aronson, (eds.), Scott Foresman, 1965).

"Small Town In Mass Society" In PERSPECTIVES ON THE AMERICAN COMMUNITY. Roland L. Warren (ed.). Rand McNally. 1966.

"Personality and the Minimization of Personal Conflicts". In ANALYSIS OF CONTEMPORARY SOCIETY, Bernard Rosenberg (ed.). Crowell, 1966.

"Springdale’s Image of Itself", In THE STUDY OF SOCIETY, Peter I. Ross, ed.. Random House, 1966.

"Religion In Springdale" In THE CONVERTED CHURCH by Paul Stagg, Judson Press, 1967.

"The Major Dimensions of Social and Economic Class" In SOCIAL CLASS IN [AMERICA. Ahmad Ashraf, University of Tehran, 1967.

"Village Politics" in COMMUNITY POWER by Frederick C. Wirt, Prentice Hall, 1968.

"The Clash of Class Interests in School Politics" In SOCIO-CULTURAL FOUNDATIONS OF GUIDANCE, Holt Rinehart, 1968.

"The Clash of Class Interests in School Politics" in EDUCATION IN SOCIETY, F. Hunt, Australia, 1968.

"Springdale and the Mass Society" in COMPARATIVE COMMUNITIES—CROSS CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES, Robert French, J.L. Peacock, 1969.

"The Classes" in STRATIFICATION IN AMERICA by Llewellyn Gross. Prentice Hall. 1969.

Sections of SMALL TOWN AND MASS SOCIETY have been anthologized two or
three times a year each year since 1969 to the present.

"La Estructura Social y la Psiocologia del ajuste," REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES, Vol. 2, No.2.

"Social and Economic Dimensions of Class in Springdale," (co-author), THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY, April, 1958. Vol. 17, No. 3, pp. 261-277.

1959 "Freedom and Responsibility in Research," HUMAN ORGANIZATION, Vol. 17, No.4 "Psychological Techniques of Adjustment to Community Values," REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES, March 1959, Vol. Ill, No.1.

1960 IDENTITY AND ANXIETY: TOE SURVIVAL OF TOE PERSON IN MASS SOCIETY, co-edited reader. Free Press.

"Social Theory and Social Research," AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, Vol. LX No. 6. Reprinted in SOCIOLOGY ON TRIAL, 1963.

"Freedom and Responsibility In Research," HUMAN ORGANIZATION, Vol. 19. No 1, 1960: 3-4
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.17730/humo.19.1.c4237p78776553j1

"Cambio de Personalidad en la Vida Militar." REVISTA DE CIENCHIAS SOCIALES, Vol. IV, Junto, 1960. No. 2, pp. 339-356.

"Identity and History" and "The Dissolved Identity in Military Life," both in IDENTITY AND ANXIETY, 1960, pp. 17-36 and 493-506.

1961 “Political Psychology of Dependent Societies" papers of the VIth Latin American Congress of Sociology, Caracas, Venezuela.

1962 "Business Cycles, Class and Personality." (with J. Bensman) in PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PSYCHOANALYTIC REVIEW, Summer 1962. Reprinted in AMERICAS AS A MASS SOCIETY. P. Olson (ed.), Free Press, 1963.

"Power Cliques in Bureaucratic Society." SOCIAL RESEARCH, Winter 1962, Vol. 29, No. 4, pp. 467-474(with J. Bensman). Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40969630

1963 "SOCIOLOGY ON TRIAL, Prentice Hall, Spectrum paperback original (edited with M. Stein).

"The Higher Dialectic of Philanthropy," SOCIAL RESEARCH, Winter 1963, Vol. 30, No. 4: pp 409-418.   Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40969701
 Reprinted in READINGS IN MODERN SOCIOLOGY, D. Wrong and H. Gracey, Free Press, 1967.

1964 REFLECTIONS ON COMMUNITY STUDIES, J. Wiley and Sons, (co-author). "The Springdale Case: Academic Bureaucrats and Sensitive Townspeople," In REFLECTIONS, (with J. Bensman).

1965 "Paul Radin and Contemporary Anthropology" In SOCIAL RESEARCH, Winter 1965, Vol. 32, No. 4, pp. 375-407. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40969815

1966 Introduction (125 pages) to the re-Issue of Paul Radin's METHOD AND THEORY OF ETHNOLOGY, Basic Books, Inc., New York.

1968 SMALL TOWN IN MASS SOCIETY, revised edition including 150 pages of new material, Princeton Press.

"The New Middle Classes and Urban Reform Politics" in the TENTH STREET BULLETIN, January 26, 1968 #7

1969 "Philanthropy, A Significant Economic Institution," ARTS MANAGEMENT, Feb.,1969.

1970 "The New Middle Classes: Their Culture and Life Styles," THE JOURNAL OF AESTHETIC EDUCATION, University of Illinois, January 1970, Vol. 4 No1, pp. 23-39 (co-author).
DOI: 10.2307/3331491

Anthropology and the Behavioral and Health Sciences (ed. D. VonMering and L. Kasdan), Univ. Pittsburgh Press, Part I, Sociology Commentary, pp. 56-59.

"The Struggle for the Underdeveloped World," CARIBBEAN REVIEW, Fall 1970, Vol. 2,No.3.

"The Interlocking Directorate in the Knowledge Industry," in SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND SOCIAL POLICY, Appleton-Century-Crofts, pp. 181-188.

1971 THE NEW AMERICAN SOCIETY (with J. Bensman) Quadrangle, Spring. 306 pp.

"The High School Principal In N.Y. City" (with C. McReynolds), in ANTHROPOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON EDUCATION, Basic Books

REFLECTIONS ON COMMUNITY STUDIES. Harper Torchbook Edition.

1972 "The Cultural Contradictions of Daniel Bell" (with J. Bensman), JOURNAL OF AESTHETIC EDUCATION, January, 1972, Vol. 6, No.1/2, pp. 53-65: DOI: 10.2307/3331411

1973 "Political Policy and Welfare Services" Chapter II of NIMH Task Force VI. SOCIAL AND CULTURAL FACTORS IN COMMUNITY HEALTH TRAINING.

1974 THE NEW AMERICAN SOCIETY, paperback edition. Quadrangle. The New York Times, Book Co. http://www.alibris.com/search/books/author/Vidich,%20Arthur%20J.

"Comment on Diane Lewis' "Anthropology and Colonialism", CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY, December 1973, Vol 14, No. 5. p. 597. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2741037

"Ideological Themes in American Anthropology", SOCIAL RESEARCH, Winter 1974, Vol. 41: No. 4, pp. 719-745.
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40970205

"Anthropologija u Modernom svijetu," REVIJA ZA SOCIOLOGIJU, Gadlna 4, pp. 13-28, Zagreb.

1975 “Recent Developments in American Society: Reply to Ivan Light” in Theory and Society, Vol. 2, No. 1 Spring1975, pp. 125-133, with J. Bensman.
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/657043

Social Conflict in the Era of Détente: New Roles for Ideologues, Revolutionaries and Youth,” Social Research, Spring 1975, Vol. 42, No. 1, pp. 64-87. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41582816

La Pequena Poblacion en La Sociedad de Masas, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico City, Spanish edition of Small Town in Mass Society,

Metropolitan Communities: New Forms of Urban Sub-Communities, Franklin-Watts, NY (with J. Bensman). 296 pp

“Political Legitimacy in Bureaucratic Society: An Analysis of Watergate,” Social Research, Winter 1975, Vol. 42, No. 4 , pp. 778-811. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/41582864

1976 “The Crisis in Contemporary Capitalism and the Failure of Nerve” Sociological Inquiry, Vol. 46, #3-4 (with J. Bensman). http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119642345/abstract?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0

1979 "Community Structures in World Perspective: Decline and Transfiguration," Qualitative Sociology, May 1979, Vol. 2, Issue 1, pp. 45-72: doi:10.1007/BF02390133

Problems of Legitimacy in Third World Countries," in CONFLICT AND
CONTROL: LEGITIMACY PROBLEMS OF MODERN GOVERNMENTS, Sage
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Conflict-Control-Challenge-Legitimacy-Governments/dp/0803909748

Review of THE ORIGINS OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC DISORDER by Fred Block, in The Journal of Economic Sociology

1980 "Prodigious Fathers, Prodigal Sons," review essay of Nisbet and Bottomore, HISTORY OF SOCIOLOGICAL ANALYSIS in Qualitative Analysis. with S.M. Lyman

1980 Revolutions in Community Structures: in the Dying community. A. Gallaher, Jr. and H. Padfleld (eds). University of New Mexico Press

“Prospects for Peace in the Nuclear World,” Journal of Political and Military Sociology, Vol. 8,  No. 1, Spring 1980, pp. 85-97

The Theodicy of Man-Made Hazards,” Anthropology Research Center Newsletter, September `1980, Vol. 4 (3)

Inflation and Social Structure: The United States in an Epoch of Declining Abundance,” Social Problems, June 1980,  Vol. 27 (5), pp. 636-649: DOI: 10.2307/800201

1981 Sociology and Society: Disciplinary Tensions and Professional Compromises,” Social Research, Summer 1981, Vol. 48 (2) pp. 322-361, [with S.M. Lyman and J.C. Goldfarb)
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40970823 

1982 "Hans Gerth: A Modern Intellectual Exile," Introduction to POLITICS CHARACTER AND CULTURE: ESSAYS FROM HANS GERTH

“The Moral, Economic and Political Meaning of Labor in American Society,” Social Research, Fall Secular Evangelism at the University of Wisconsin,” Social Research, (with S.M. Lyman) Civilization, Consciousness and Rationality: In Honor of Benjamin N. Nelson. Special Issue of Social Research, edited with an Introduction, Fall.

1983 "Social and Political Consequences of Inflation, Unemployment and Declining Abundance," in INFLATION THROUGH THE AGES: ECONOMIC, SOCIAL, PSYCHOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL ASPECTS (edited by Schmukler and Marcus), Columbia University Press

"The Rationalization of the Social Sciences," The New American Review
("Situaclon Actual de la Sociologia Norteamericana," in PERSPECTIVAS SOCIOLOGICAS INTERNATIONALES, Corporacion Editorial Unlversitaria de Colombia, Call, pp. 1-24.

1985 "Socijaini Pokretic I Gradansko Drustvo: Teoria Socijalnog Procesa u Americkoj Zajednici," (with Stanford Lyman) in REVIJA ZA SOCIOLOGIJU, Vol. 1, 1985.

1986 "The Moral, Economic and Political Status of Labor in American Society," in THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE, vol. 9, no. 1. pp. 43-61. 1986. http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/114054567/abstract

"State, Ethics and Public Morality in American Sociological Thought," in Mark Wardell and Stephen P. Turner, SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY IN TRANSITION, Alien and Unwin; Boston, pp. 44-58 (with Stanford M. Lyman), 1986.

Introduction to Hans Speier, THE GERMAN WHITE COLLAR WORKER AND HITLER, Yale University Press: New Haven, CT, 1986.

"Klasai RsligiJa u Americkoj Politici," in REVIJA ZA SOCIOLOGIJU, Vol. XVI, pp. 181-195, 1986.

1987 Religion, Economic and Class in American Politics,” in Politics, Culture and Society, Vol. 1, No. 1. pp. 4-22, Fall, 1987. http://www.springerlink.com/content/p85pw25241243p13/

1988 “The Values and Morality of Scientists,” in Politics, Culture and Society, Vol. 1, No. 3. Spring 1988, pp. 471-486. http://www.springerlink.com/content/j41350914085hu2p/

Fraternization and Rationality in Global Perspective: (with Michael Hughey) in Politics, Culture and Society, Vol. 2, No. 2. Winter 1988, pp. 242-256. http://www.springerlink.com/content/p15781398400534m/

1989 Prologue to Hans Speier, THE TRUTH IN HELL, Oxford University Press; NY, 1989.

1990 "The American Democracy in the Late 20th Century," in POLITICS CULTURE AND SOCIETY, Vol. 4, no. 1. Autumn 1990, .pp. 5-29:  http://www.springerlink.com/content/r3335784k635jg74/

1991 "The End of the Enlightenment and Modernity: The Irrational Ironies of Rationalization," in POLITICS, CULTURE AND SOCIETY, Vol. 4, no. 3, 1991 http://www.springerlink.com/content/wm7r8709u8700371/

Religious Contributions to Social Movements, Journal of Religious Ethics (18) 1991, 7-25.(with S. Lyman)

"Social Theory and the Substantive Problems of Sociology" in POLITICS. CULTURE AND SOCIETY. Vol. 4. no. 4,  Summer 1991.pp. 517-534: http://www.springerlink.com/content/nm02622r420178w2/

Foreword to CRAFT AND CONSCIOUSNESS: OCCUPATIONAL TECHNIQUE AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF WORLD IMAGES, by J. Bensman and R. Lillienfeld, Aldine DeGruyter, 1991.

1992 Foreword to MAX WEBER'S SOCIOLOGY OF INTELLECTUALS, by Ahmad Sadri, Oxford University Press; NY, 1992.

"Boston's North End: An American Epic," in CONTEMPORARY ETHNOGRAPHY. Vol. 21, no. 1. 1992. http://jce.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/21/1/80

"Veblen and Post-Keynesian Political Economy" in REVUE INTERNATIONALE DE SOCIOLOGIE. New Series,Vol. 3, no. 3, 1992.pp. 151-181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03906701.1992.9971126

“The new American pluralism: Racial and ethnic sodalities and their sociological implications” in POLITICS. CULTURE AND SOCIETY. Vol. 6. no. 4, 1993. (with Michael Hughey) Vol. 6, No. 2, December 1992. http://www.springerlink.com/content/w6532222823x7533/

1993 Foreword to Claus-Dieter Krohn, INTELLECTUALS IN EXILE; THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH. University of Mass. Press, Fall. 1993.

"Veblen, Weber and Marx on political economy" in POLITICS. CULTURE AND SOCIETY. Vol. 6. no. 4, 1Summer 993, pp. 491-505. (with Michael Hughey) http://www.springerlink.com/content/tp06v8h74685nvl1/

1994 "The History of Qualitative Methods in Sociology and Anthropology" (with Stanford M. Lyman) to appear in HANDBOOK OF QUALITATIVE METHODS, eds. Norman Denzin and Ivanna Lincoln, Sage, 1994.

"The Higher Learning in America in Veblen's Time and in Our Own" in The International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, Vol. 7, # 4, Summer 1994, pp.639-68. http://www.springerlink.com/content/n482gm2750t35106/

PROPAGANDA (MAIN TRENDS OF THE MODERN WORLD S.) by ARTHUR J. VIDICH (PREFACE) ROBERT JACKALL (EDITOR) (Hardcover - 1994)

1995 "Towards a Rational Grasp of Irrationality: Some Lags in Social and Economic Theory," The International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, Vol. 9, # 1, Fall 1995, pp. 5-28. http://www.springerlink.com/content/jm95mv603um1252u/

1996 "Empirical Realities and Social and Economic Theorizing: Some Starting Assumptions for Research," Revija za Sociologiyu, vol. 27, No. 1-2. 1996, p.21-36.

1999 "The Cultural Contradictions of Daniel Bell" (with J. Bensman), The International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, Vol. 12, # 3, Spring 1999, pp. 503-514
http://gk.econ.msu.ru/%D0%B3%D0%BB%D1%83%D1%85%D0%BE%D0%B2/5.pdf

REVIEWS AND REVIEW ESSAYS

"State, Society and Calvinism: Parsons and Merton as Seen From Abroad," in POLITICS, CULTURE AND SOCIETY, Vol. 2, no. 1, Fall 1988, pp. 109-121. (Review of TALCOTT PARSONS AND THE CAPITALIST NATION STATE. ROBERT MERTON: AN INTELLECTUAL PROFILE and TALCOTT PARSONS ON ECONOMY AND SOCIETY).


Peter Rutkoff and William Scott, NEW SCHOOL: A HISTORY OF THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH, in CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGY, 1988, pp. 274-276.

Constance Perin, BELONGING IN AMERICA, in CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGY. Vol. 19, no. 3. May 1990.

"Baudrillard's America: Lost in the Ultimate Simulacrum," article length review in THEORY, CULTURE AND SOCIETY. Vol. 8. no. 4, 1991

"Twenty Years After the Coming Crisis," in INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITATIVE STUDIES IN EDUCATION, Vol. 4, no. 39. 1991.(Retrospective on Alvin Gouldner's THE COMING CRISIS IN WESTERN SOCIOLOGY).

"Intelligence Agencies and the Universities; Further Implications of the Thesis Advanced by Sigmund Diamond," in INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF POLITICS, CULTURE AND SOCIETY, Vol. 6, no. 4, 1992. (Review of Sigmund Diamond's COMPROMISED CAMPUS; THE INTELLIGENCE AGENCIES IN THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES).

Bruce Mazlich, A NEW SCIENCE: THE BREAKDOWN OF CONNECTIONS AND THE BIRTH OF SOCIOLOGY, in CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGY, 1991.

"Veblen, Weber and Marx on Political Economy." in INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OP POLITICS, CULTURE AND SOCIETY, vol. 6, no. 4, 1993, pp. 491-505.

"A Note on the Alleged Decomposition of Sociology" in The International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society. Vol. 7, #, Spring 1994. pp.569-71.

"Atomic Bombs and the American Democracy". Review of Guy Oakes' book The Imaginary War, in The International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, Vol. 8, No. 3. Spring 1995. http://www.springerlink.com/content/m4000001p06g8r45/

UNPUBLISHED STUDIES

TRUJILLO BAJO: CLASS, PARTY AND PUBLIC POLICY IN A PUERTO RICAN TOWN (1960) 250 pp.
GERALD L. K. SMITH SPEAKS AT VIRAQUA: A SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDY IN PUBLIC OPINION (1948) 112 pp.
THE AMERICAN SUCCESS DILEMMA. M.A. Thesis, Univ. of Wisconsin (1948) 190 pp.
THE POVERTY OF PHILANTHROPY (1965) 200 pp.

RESEARCH INTERESTS

Research and analysis on problems of religion, capitalism, and the state
Research on intellectuals
Research on problems of self, community and sociodicy
Research on Yugoslavia


PAPERS, COLLOQUIA AND CONFERENCES

American Anthropological Association, Denver. Nov. 1965

University of Pennsylvania Sociology Colloquia Lecture on American Class Structure Dec. 1965

Washington University, St. Louis, Seminar on the “Anthropology of Complex Societies,” twenty participants, arranged by Alvin Wolff. Paper presented. Feb. 1966

Connecticut College for Women, New London, two day college-wide conference on “Creativity in a Technological Age.” Presented one of three papers along with B.F. Skinner and Henry Morgenan, and acted as a panelist. Feb. 1966

Organized and conducted a Ford Foundation sponsored seminar at Yale University on Latin American research. March 1966

Eastern Sociological Society, Philadelphia. April 1966

World Congress of Psychology (by invitation of the ACLA for the express purpose of meeting Russian sociologists). Moscow. (Paper presented). August 1966

While in Europe during the summer of 1966, I went to Warsaw and Zagreb for the express purpose of meeting Polish and Yugoslav sociologists. Summer 1966

World Congress of Sociology, Evian, France. Sept. 1966

Annual Meeting of American Anthropological Association, Pittsburgh, (discussant on symposium on “Anthropology and Neighboring Disciplines, Sociology and Anthropology.” Nov. 1966

Victor E. Pitkin Research Institute on Problems of Education. Talk in Middle Class children. Feb. 1967
College of General Studies, University of Puerto Rico. Three lectures on American Social Structure. Feb. 1967

Clark University Sociology Colloquium. March 1967

"Ethnocentrism in Anthropology," American Anthropological Association, N.Y., November, 1971.

"Small Towns and New Communities", American Anthropological Association, N.Y., November, 1971.

"Cities, Communities and Civilizations," Panel Discussion, Eastern Sociological Society, Boston, April, 1972.

"Urban Communities," American Sociological Association, New Orleans, Sept. 1972.

"The Quest for Community." Fifth Annual Muskingum College Sociological Colloquium, Nov. 12-14, 1972.

First International Sociological Conference on Participation and Self-Management, Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, Dec. 13-17, 1972, participating member.

Chairman, Workshop Session, "Doctoral Production and Social Policy," Eastern Sociological Society, Annual Meeting April 14, 1973.

Discussant on two panels, "Structuralism and Sociology" and "Styles and Issues In Teaching Community," American Sociological Association, Aug. '73, N.Y.

Fulbright Lecturer on American Society, University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia, June, 1973-January, 1974.

The International Council of the University Emergency Conference on “The Crisis of the University,” Venice, October 14-17, 1973, Observer.

United Nations Conference on “Rural Industrialization in Developing Countries”, Bucharest, September 24-28, 1973, Observer.

"Elites and Societal Coordination", American Sociological Association Annual Meeting. Montreal, August 26-29, 1974. Round Table Discussion Leader.

International Conference on the Social Sciences and Problems of Development. Tehran, Iran. Jointly sponsored by University of Iran and Princeton University. May 17-20, 1974.

New School Bonn Conference, June, 1974: Paper "Social Conflict in the Ear of Detente".

Rhode Island State College, March, 1973: "American Society: Dissensus and Detente".

Graduate Faculty Sociology Club, April, 1973: "Bureaucracy and Workers Participation: The Case of Yugoslavia"

General Seminar, Graduate Faculty, April, 1973, "Ideological Themes in American Anthropology.

Several public lectures In Yugoslavia while on Fulbright, Fall, 1973.

"Critical Issues in Anthropological Theory," American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting, Mexico, December, 1974.

Keynote Speaker, University of Maryland School of Social Work and Community Planning Conference on "Collapse of Abundance." Address entitled "Increasing Scarcity: Consequences for American Society". Jan. 21-22, 1975.

Plenary Session Speaker. Annual Meeting, Eastern Sociological Society, "Détente: Prospects for Conflict and War", New York. April, 1975.

"Class Structure and Class Conflict in American Society," Round table presented at Annual Meetings of American Sociological Association, San Francisco August, 1975.

Aspen-Persepolis Conference, Persepolis, Iran. Invited Participant, Sept. 12-24, 1975.

Arizona State College, Council on Humanities Symposium, "Political Ethics", November 22, 1975.

American Anthropological Association, "The Role of the Culture Concept in Anthropoloty". Annual Meetings, San Francisco, Dec. 2-6, 1975.

Plenary Speaker, Southern New England Regional Undergraduate Research Conference in Sociology, Providence College. April 10, 1976. "American Society in the1970's".

Master Lecture Series, Ramapo College, N.J., "Political Tensions In an Age of Decreasing Abundance," May 4, 1976.

Williams College, "The Crisis of Contemporary Capitalism", May 12, 1976.

Marlboro College, "The Crisis of Contemporary Capitalism", May 14, 1976.

Empire State College, Center for Labor Studies, "The Multi-National Corporation in the Modern World", June 4, 1976.

Boston Festival for Critical Social Theory, Boston University, July 26-28, 1976, "Modern Capitalism, Its Crisis, Its Future".

American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, New York, N.Y., August 27- September 1, 1976, Roundtables on "Legitimation Problems of Capitalist and Communist Countries" and "The Middle Class In the American Urban Community".

American Sociological Association, Annual Meetings, Chicago, September 3-7, 1977; paper, “Capital Accumulation, Imperialism and the Third World,” Roundtable, “Images of Community in Social Theory”

Breman Professorship Public Lectures, University of North Carolina, Asheville, “American Society: Current Tensions and Conflicts,” August 29, 1977; “The Changing Role of the U.S. in World Affairs,” September 14, 1977.

University of California, San Diego, Sociology Colloquium, "American Society and the Crisis of Capitalism," October 20, 1977

University of California, San Francisco, Sociology Colloquium, "The Discovery of Problems In Field Research," December 16, 1977

Arizona State University, Tempe, Lecture January 22, 1978 and University of Oklahoma, Norman, Lecture, January 25, 1978, "Social and Political Tensions In American Society"

University of Munich, Institute fur Politische Wissenschaft, June 1978. "The Crisis of Western Capitalism"

Lectures on American society in various cities and universities in Japan (Tokyo, Kyoto, Fukuoka, Sapporo) and Korea (Seoul, Teagu), Summer 1978

American Sociological Association, Annual Meetings, San Francisco September 3-8, Roundtable: "Social and Political Sources of International Disorder

New York State Sociological Society. New York, October 7-8, 1978, Chair Plenary Session, "Social Research and Policy Making"

"The Role of Religion In American Culture," Lecture, Gallatin Division Seminar on the Humanities, New York University, February 28, 1979.

"The Prospects for Peace in a Managed World," Eastern Sociological Society, New York, March 17, 1979.

"The Sociology of Nuclear Diplomacy," Williams College Colloquium, April 25. 1979.

“The Sociology of International Relations," Special Studies Seminar. University of North Carolina, Asheville, North Carolina, July 1979.

"Sociology in the Administrative State," Society for the Study of Social Problems. National Meetings, Boston, August 26, 1979 (with S.M. Lyman and J.C. Goldfarb).

"Inflation, Declining Abundance and Class Structure in the United States," Annual meetings of the American Sociological Association, Boston, August 28, 1979.

“A Long View of Community Sociology,” invited panelist for plenary session of Community Section, A.S.A., Boston, August 29, 1979.

Paper on Hans H. Gerth presented at a Memorial Seminar in his honor and on Nels Anderson on the occasion of presenting him with an award for his contributions to Community Sociology, A.S.A. meetings, Boston, August 30, 1979.

"Problems of Yugoslav Immigration to the United States." Slavic Studies Association Meetings, New Haven, Connecticut, October 1979, panel discussant.

City college of New York, “The Role of Religion in American Culture,” October 18, 1979.

New York University Graduate Social Science Seminar, Gallatin Division, November 14, 1979, “Social Science Tensions in a Period of Declining Abundance”

Eighth Brooklyn College conference on Society in Change, March 10-11-12, 1980, Social and Political Consequences of Inflation"

University of New Hampshire, Durham, Department of Political Science, April 3-4, 1980, “Inflation and Social Structure”

Bernardin Fellow, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Missouri, Kansas City. April 7-8-9, 1980.

Three lectures: "Religious Foundations of American Institutions," "Moral and Ethical Problems of American Business," "Class and Politics In Contemporary America"

"Well-Being, Religion and World Order: An Anthropological View," Center for International Affairs, Harvard University, October 29, 1980.

"The United States in the World Political Economy: Prospects for the 1980s," University of Maryland, November 12, 1980.

"Changing Social Structure In a Changing Economy" President's Seminar, New School for Social Research, November 18, 1980.

"Patterns of Social Resentment: Class Responses to Increasing Economic Competition and Scarcity," Gallatin Division, New York University, November 19, 1980.

"Changing Values in a Changing Social Structure," University of Bridgeport, •Doctoral Program In Educational Leadership, January 30, 1981.

"Yugoslavia after Tito," New College, USF. Conference on Eastern Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, March 26-28, 1981.

“Ideology and Problems of Political Legitimacy in the United States," SUNY New Paltz, March 5. 1981.
Annual meetings of the American Sociological Association. Chair, Community Section Council and Business Meeting. October 24-28, 1981.

New York University, Gallatin Division, November 11. 1981. "The Meaning of Reaganism"

Eastern Sociological Society. April 4-6, 1982, Philadelphia, Plenary paper, Neo-Conservatism: The State Administration of Civil and Moral Regulation"

Moorhead State University Visiting Scholars Program, April 25, 1982, "The Meaning of Reaganism"

University of Minnesota, Department of Sociology Colloquium, April 27, 1982, "The Economic and Intellectual Crisis of Sociology"

The Environment of the Work Place and Human Values, A Conference of the Labor Policy Institute of the College of William and Mary, Plenary Paper, "The Moral, Economic and Political Meaning of Work in the United States," May 18-21, 1982

IV Congresso Naclonal de Sociologia, Unlversidad del Valle, Colombia, August 4,5,6, 1982. Plenary Paper, "Situacion Actual de la Sociologia Norteamericana"

American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, September 5-9, 1982, "Community Studies in Related Disciplines: Anthropology"

New York University, Gallatin Division, December 2, 1982, "The Values of Neo-Conservatism"

Eastern Sociological Society, Annual Meetings, Baltimore, March 6, 1983, Discussant for Session: "Legitimation Crisis in Eastern Europe"

Conference on Eastern Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, New College, Sarasota, Florida, March 28-29, 1983: Chair of session, "Industrial Migration and the Environment"

Keynote Speaker, New York State Sociological Society Annual Meetings, Potsdam, New York, October 28-29, 1983, "Self, Community and Society"

Lecture, Center for the Study of Justice, Arizona State University, January 31, 1984, "Bureaucracy, Criminalization and Morality"

Lecture, Montana State University, Department of History and Philosophy conference on small Towns and Villages in the Urban Age, February 3-7, 1984, “American Community Studies”

Organizer and Presider, Emil Lederer International Centennial Symposium, New School for Social Research, October 7-8, 1983, paper: “Religion, State and Civil Society I American Social Theory”

American Sociological Association Annual Meetings, San Antonio, August 1984, paper, “Self Community and the Problem of Public Morality”

LECTURES AND CONFERENCES

Chair of sessions on “Agrarian Populations in Transition” and East European social Developments” at University of South Florida (New College) Conference on Eastern Europe in the Nineteenth and twentieth Centuries, March 28-30, 1985.

“Religious Values in American Political Life,” Graduate Humanities Seminar, Gallatin Division, New York University, November 6, 1985.

The Morality of Scientists,” paper presented at Brooklyn College Humanities Symposium, November 1985.
“What Can Sociologists Learn from Schumpeter and Polanyi?” Round Table discussant, Annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Washington DC, August 30, 1985.

“The Role of Sociology in the Welfare State,” paper presented at City College Symposium on the Crisis of the Social Sciences, February 1986.

Social Problems Theory and the future,” session discussant, Midwest Sociological meetings, Des Moines, Iowa, March 27, 1986.

Author meets the critic session on American Sociology, Midwest Sociological Meetings, Des Moines, Iowa, March 27, 1986.

"The values and Morality of Scientists: Some Unsolved Problems " Brandeis University, Martin Weiner Distinguished Lectureship; April 17, 1986.

Sociology in the Welfare Capitalist State," University of Zagreb and the Croatian Sociological Association. Yugoslavia. May 16, 1986.

Class and Religion in American Politics," First Annual Conference on Social Stratification and Mobility in Comparative Perspectives, Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, May 26, 1986

Co-Director, First Annual Conference on Social Stratification and Mobility in Comparative Perspectives, Inter-University Centre of Postgraduate Education, Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia. May 18-30. 1986.

Discussant for session on "Interaction and Community Life." Society for the study of symbolic Interactionism. New York, August 31, 1986.

"A California School of Interactionism." paper presented at the annual meeting of S.S.S.I., N.Y.. September 1, 1986

"SOHO and the Cultural Development of Lower Manhattan," round table organizer and commentator. Annual Meeting. American Sociological Association. New York, September 3, 1986.
Discussant. "Innovative Methods in Urban Sociology," Annual Meeting of A.S.A., N.Y., September 3, 1986.
"Anthropology and Truth: Some Old Problems." American Anthropological Association Meetings. Panel Looking Backward, Looking Forward, Philadelphia. PA. December 7. 1986.

"Political Legitimacy and Religion in American Politics," New York University lecture. December 10. 1986.

"Bureaucracy, Advanced Technology and Managerial Elites." Second Annual Conference on Social Stratification and Social Mobility in Comparative Perspectives. Dubrovnik. Yugoslavia, April 6-17, 1987.

Homage to Joseph Bensman, Eastern Sociological Society Meetings Boston. MA. May 1, 1987.

"The Sociology of Joseph Bensman," City University Sociology Alumni Association. November, 1987.
"Religion, Mass Communications and Political Legitimacy in American Politics," Graduate Humanities Seminar, Gallatin Division, New York University, December. 1987.

"The Rhetorics of American Politics," New York University. Graduate Humanities Division. November 30, 1988.

"Public Opinion, Mass Media and American Politics," Fordham University, March 18, 1988.

"Politics and Public Opinion," New York University, Graduate Humanities Division, November 30, 1988.

"The American Middle Classes and Politics," The East Side International Community Center, New York. January 31, 1989.

"Public Opinion in American Politics," The East Side International Community Center, New York, February 28, 1989.
"Herman Schmalenbach and Gregory Stone," Arizona State University, 1989 Gregory Stone Symbolic Interaction Symposium. March 16-18, 1989.

"Mass Communications and American Politics: Plebiscitory Democracy," Univ. of Connecticut, April 11, 1989.

"Presidents, Journalists and Public Opinion," New College, Sarasota, PL, April 17, 1989.

"Individualism and Populism." Thurau Kulturwissenschaftliches Gesprach. Bayreuth, Germany, June 9-ll. 1989.

The American Presidency and the Press,” Lake Forest College, September 26, 1989.

Politics Public Opinion and Propaganda." New York University, Graduate Humanities Center, November 29, 1989.

"Political Rhetorics and Mass Media in the 1988 Presidential Campaign, Gregory Stone Conference, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg, FL, February, 1990.

Political, Religious and Economic Dimensions of American Capitalism, Dubrovnik, May 1990.

Herbert Blumer on Industrialization and Social Change,” Symposium Commentator, Society for the Study of Symbolic Interactionism, Washington DC, August 1990.

“A New End to the Cold War: Changing Relations Between East and West." New York University. Graduate Humanities Division, November 1990.

Social Theory and the Substantive Problems of Sociology." SSSI Stone Symposium, University of California, San Francisco. February 1991.

"Social Theory and Field Research," Williams College, May 1991.

"Yugoslavia in Transition." Chair of Panel, New College. University of Florida Conference on Eastern Europe, March 25-27, 1991.

"Social and Economic Trends in American Society," New York University, Gallatin Division, November 1991.

"Liberty and Individualism in the Thought of Henry David Thoreau " conference participant, New College, Sarasota, Florida. January 1992.

"The American Political Economy," A.K.D. Keynote Address, Seton Hall University. April 1992.

"Others and Brothers: the O.S.S. and the F.B.I, at Harvard " University of Maryland, College Park, conference on Academic Knowledge and Political Power- November 1992.

"American Democracy and the Electoral Process," New York University, Gallatin Division. November 1992.

"Prospects for the Clinton Presidency," United Nations Lecture February 1993.

The Causes of Yugoslavia’s Dissolution,” organizer and chair of panel, New College, University of Florida, Conference on Eastern Europe, March 1993.

“Problems for the Clinton Presidency,” A.K.D. Keynote Address, University of Dayton, April 1993.

"Krohn Symposium Lecture", New School, February 22, 1994.

"Political and Economic Irrationalities in Our Time", New York University Gallatin Division, November 22, 1994.

"Towards a Rational Grasp of Irrationality: Social and Economic Theory In Our Time," Distinguished Lecture presented to SSSI Association in Washington, D.C., August 20, 1995.

"Some Gaps in Social and Economic Theory," paper presented at sociology meetings, Washington, D.C., August 21, 1995.

"Some Underlying Tensions in Multi-Ethnic, Multi-Racial United States," New York University, Gallatin, Division. November 28, 1995.

"International Classes and Cultures: Social, Economic and Political Dimensions," presented at the biennial meeting of The International Thorstein Veblen Association, Carlton College, Northfield, MN, May 29 - June 1, 1996.

"Political Ceremonies and Political Participation: The Meaning of the 1996 Elections," New York University, Gallatin Division, November 19, 1996.

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES AND PAPERS

“Political Dimensions of Colonial Administration,” London School of Economics, England, 1950
“Problems of nationalism in the Third World,” VIth Latin American Congress of Sociology, Caracas, Venezuela, 1958, published in Congress Proceedings.

"Proposal for a Study of Venezuelan Leadership," unpublished 1961, written for Venezuelan research organization, CENDES, as part of proposed joint MIT-New School study of Venezuela sponsored by the Ford Foundation.

Political Conflict in Colombia,” paper presented to Colombian Sociological Association, 1964, while serving as Ford Foundation Consultant to Universidad Nacional.
“Personality and Bureaucracy,” paper presented to VIIth International Congress of Psychology, Moscow, 1967, under a grant from the ford Foundation.
International Congress of Sociology, Evian, 1967.
First International Sociological Conference on Participation and Self Management, Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, 1972, invited participant

"Legitimacy Problems of Capitalist and Communist Countries," University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia, Colloquium, 1973

United Nations Conference on "Rural Industrialization In Developing Countries," Bucharest, Rumania, Fall 1973

The International Council of the University Emergency Conference on the Crisis of the University," Venice, Fall 1973, Invited Participant

International Conference on the Social Sciences and Problems of Development, Tehran, Iran. Jointly sponsored by the University of Iran and Princeton University, Spring 1974

"Social Conflict in the Era of Detente." New School-Bonn Conference on Is Peace Possible? (June 1974)

"Aspen Institute Persepolis Symposium on "Iran, Past, Present and Future. Persepolls, Iran, September 1975, Invited Participant

"Ideological Themes In American Anthropology." Mexico City. Annual Meetings of the American Anthropological Association. November 1975

"The Crisis of Western Capitalism," University of Munich. Institute fur Polltlsche Wissenschaft, June 1978

The present Situation of American Sociology." University of Hong Kong, July 1978

Kyoto-American Summer Studies Seminar, Kyoto, Japan, Distinguished Lecturer, "Social and Cultural Change In the United States," August 1978

Lectures on American Society sponsored by the International Communications Agency in Tokyo, Fukuoka, Sapporo, Seoul and Teagu. Mr. Hlei Seminar for experts, "Ideology and Political Instability," August 18, 1978

Inter-university Centre for Post-Graduate Studies, Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia.
Conference on the New Social Movements and the Democratization of Society
March 28-April 1, 1984. Paper: "Social Movements and Society: A Theory
of Social Process in the American Commonwealth"

Lecture, University of Ljubljana, "Religion and American Politics," April 4, 1984

Lecture, University of Rome, April 17, 1984, "Religion and American Politics"

GRANTS RECEIVED

University of Puerto Rico, Social Science Research Council
Wenner-Gren Foundation
American Philosophical Association
American Council of Learned Societies
Ford Foundation
NIMH Research Training Program at the Graduate Faculty
United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare

AWARDS AND HONORS

Iron Cross Honorary Society, University of Wisconsin, 1942
Thayer Fellow, Harvard University, 1951
Recipient, I. Peter Gelman Award for distinguished service
to the Eastern Sociological Society, 1975
Chair. Community Section, American Sociological Association
(1980-1982)
Fellow, Inter-University Seminar on Armed Forces and Society

AWARDS

Distinguished Fulbright Lecturer, Yugoslavia, May-June, 1986
American Sociological Association. Section on Community. 1987: Robert and Helen Lynd Award for Lifetime Contributions to Research in Community

ADVISORY POSITIONS

Editorial Advisor, Appleton-Century-Crofts (1966-1973)
Member, Editorial Board. Social Research. 1971-present
Member, Editorial Board, Journal of Political and Military
Sociology. 1973-present
Member, Advisory Board, Small Towns Institute, 1970-present
Sociology and Anthropology Editorial Advisor to Appleton- Century-Crofts 1966-1973
Member of Task Force on Social and Cultural Factors in Community Mental Health Training, 1972-1973
Member, Steering Committee, National Recreation and Park Assoc., Second National Forum, 1968-1969
Editorial Advisor In Sociology to Praeger Publishing Co.,
Editor, "Viewpoints in Sociology" Series, 1973-1975
Editorial Advisor, John Wiley and Sons, 1973-1975
Consultant on film production, THROUGH ALL TIME, Public
Broadcasting, San Diego, San Diego State College, 1973-1975
Member, Advisory Screening Committee, Council for International Exchange of Scholars, 1979-1982
Reader for Free Press, Allyn and Beacon, University of Massachusetts Press, Associated Faculty Press

EDITORIAL POSITIONS


Appointed as Advisory Editor to Appleton Century Crofts in Anthropology and Sociological Theory. December 1966.

Editor: State, Culture and Society; An International Journal of the Social, Cultural and Political Sciences
Editor: Studies in Polity and Civil Society, a publication addressed to Issues in the social, cultural and political sciences
Editor, International Journal of POLITICS, CULTURE AND SOCIETY
Advisory Editor. JOURNAL OF POLITICAL AND MILITARY SOCIOLOGY
Series Editor (with Robert Jackall), Character and Institutions in the Modern Era: Reinventing Social Theory: New York University Press, 12 Volumes.
Series Editor, Main Trends in the Modem Epoch, Nine Volumes, NYU Press, first four volumes appear in November 1994. Four additional volumes issued in 1997, 1998, 2000 and 2002.
Senior Editor, The International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society.

GRADUATE FACULTY ACTIVITIES

General Seminar, March, 1966, “The United States and the Underdeveloped World.”
Chairman of Sociology and Anthropology Department
Member of Budget and Executive Committee.
Member of University Research Committee.

CONFERENCE ADMINISTRATION

Co-Director, First Four Annual Meetings of the Institute for the Study of Contemporary Society, Brattleboro, VT, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996.

Director of First Annual Meeting of the International Thorstein Veblen Society, January 1994, New School for Social Research. Co-Director, Second Biennial Meeting, Carlton College, Northfield, MN, 1996.

Co-Director of annual Conference on Social Structures in Comparative and Historical Perspectives,” Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, 1982-1991.

Graduate Faculty Sociology Department Staff Seminar. 1983- present

Hans Speier Memorial Symposium, New School for Social Research Symposium honoring the establishment of the Hans Speier Distinguished Professorship in Sociology and 'Political Science, April 1993.

Co-Director. First Annual Meeting, Institute for the Study of Contemporary Society, New School for Social Research, January 20-22, 1993.

OTHER

Co-Founder. Institute for the Study of Contemporary Society (1992)
Founder and Co-Director, International Thorstein Veblen Association


PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS


American Sociological Association (Fellow)
American Anthropological Association (Fellow)
Eastern Sociological Society
Latin American Studies Association
Slavic Studies Association
American Studies Association
Caribbean Studies Association
Slovene Studies Association
Fulbright Alumni Association