What Makes a Social Crisis?: The Societalization of Social Problems

Jeffrey C. Alexander

What Makes a Social Crisis?: The Societalization of Social Problems
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Polity Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
13 September 2019
Pages
180
ISBN
9781509538249

What Makes a Social Crisis?: The Societalization of Social Problems

Jeffrey C. Alexander

In this book Jeffrey Alexander develops a new sociological theory of social crisis and applies it to a wide range of cases, from the church paedophilia crisis to the #MeToo movement. He argues that crises are triggered not by objective social strains but by the discourse and institutions of the civil sphere. When strains become subject to the utopian aspirations of the civil sphere, there emerges widespread anguish about social justice and the future of democratic life. Once admired institutional elites come to be represented as perpetrators and the civil sphere becomes legally and organizationally intrusive, demanding repairs in the name of civil purification. Resisting such repair, institutional elites foment backlash, and a war of the spheres ensues.

This major new work by one of the world’s leading social theorists will be of great interest to students and scholars in sociology, politics, and the social sciences generally.

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