Acknowledgements
Introduction Being Sociological about Knowledge:
Setting the Agenda
Chapter 1 Knowledge, culture(s) and Culture
Chapter 2 Schismatism, the Pursuit of Difference
and the Tradition of the New
Chapter 3 The Arbitrary and the Absolute
Chapter 4 New Times
Chapter 5 Getting Real - in media res
Conclusion Bibliography
Examines a series of inter-related problems associated with the nature of knowledge, how it is produced within intellectual fields and the implications for the transmission of knowledge in the classroom.
Rob Moore is Senior Lecturer in Sociology of Education in the Faculty of Education, Fellow of Homerton College, and College Reader in Sociology of Education at the University of Cambridge, UK.
'Towards the Sociology of Truth should be read by every sociologist
of education. It is an argument for a social realist account of
knowledge, an attempt to wrestle with and reconcile some of the
deep fissures in sociological thinking, and a reclamation of all
that is best in the discipline through an analytical history of its
intellectual antecedants. This book will prove a challenge to many
in the discipline and, because it cannot be ignored, will
be indispensable to debates about the nature of sociology of
education and the claims to knowledge that it makes.' Hugh Lauder,
Professor of Education and Political Economy, University of Bath,
UK
'A provocative examination of the key issues in the sociology
of education and the sociology of knowledge. Drawing upon his
thorough knowledge of both fields, Moore demonstrates that these
too often separate subfields in sociology need to be linked
together analytically in order to understand ongoing debates about
absolutism and relativity. Through a penetrating examination of the
development of New Sociology of Education in the 1970s and
subsequent theoretical discussions, Moore provides us with an
understanding of how knowledge is the product of a complex set of
social forces and that dualistic conceptions of objectivity and
subjectivity are more complex than the methodological debates
suggest. If this were not enough, Moore provides illuminating
analyses of both Bernstein and Bourdieu, which show how each
contributed immensely to these debates.' Alan R. Sadovnik,
Professor of Education, Sociology and Public Affairs, Rutgers
University, USA
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