Blurring Public and Private Sociology: Challenging an Artificial Division
Author(s) -
Butler Kate
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
sociological research online
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.593
H-Index - 49
ISSN - 1360-7804
DOI - 10.5153/sro.1970
Subject(s) - sociology , public sociology , sociology of leisure , historical sociology , governmentality , argument (complex analysis) , epistemology , sociology of disaster , medical sociology , sociology of education , field (mathematics) , modernity , sociology of law , social science , conversation , law , politics , political science , medicine , biochemistry , chemistry , philosophy , nursing , mathematics , communication , pure mathematics , public health
This article encourages sociologists to take a hybrid approach to the incorporation of public sociology into the discipline. The idea of public sociology rests upon a double conversation between sociologists as public actors, and the involvement of the ‘extra-academic’ world into the dialogue. However, the separation of public sociology from professional sociology is artificial. The division of labour between those working solely in academia, and those reaching out to the public at large is imaginary: sociologists do work in both the public and private. By blurring the line between public sociology and professional sociology (which constitutes a ‘privacy’ of sorts), sociology is able to reach a larger audience. To illustrate this argument, I examine how three theoretical approaches within sociology, governmentality literature, critical realism and second modernity, exemplify both public and private sociology, while remaining methodologically coherent and rigorous. These approaches show sociology to be a field in which disparate, multiple, fluid theories and metatheories exist side-by-side in work that is both public and professional.
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