Defining the Age: Daniel Bell, His Time and Ours by Paul Starr


Defining the Age: Daniel Bell, His Time and Ours
Title : Defining the Age: Daniel Bell, His Time and Ours
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Kindle Edition
Number of Pages : 380
Publication : Published February 1, 2022

The sociologist Daniel Bell was an uncommonly acute observer of the structural forces transforming the United States and other advanced societies in the twentieth century. The titles of Bell’s major books— The End of Ideology (1960), The Coming of Post-Industrial Society (1973), and The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism (1976)—became hotly debated frameworks for understanding the era when they were published.

In Defining the Age , Paul Starr and Julian E. Zelizer bring together a group of distinguished contributors to consider how well Bell’s ideas captured their historical moment and continue to provide profound insights into today’s world. Wide-ranging essays demonstrate how Bell’s writing has informed thinking about subjects such as the history of socialism, the roots of the radical right, the emerging postindustrial society, and the role of the university. The book also examines Bell’s intellectual trajectory and distinctive political stance. Calling himself “a socialist in economics, a liberal in politics, and a conservative in culture,” he resisted being pigeon-holed, especially as a neoconservative.

Defining the Age features essays from historians Jenny Andersson, David A. Bell, Michael Kazin, and Margaret O’Mara; sociologist Steven Brint; media scholar Fred Turner; and political theorists Jan-Werner Müller and Stefan Eich. While differing in their judgments, they agree on one Bell’s ideas deserve the kind of nuanced and serious attention that they finally receive in this book.


Defining the Age: Daniel Bell, His Time and Ours Reviews


  • Nils

    An unusually strong collection of essays focused in revisiting Daniel Bell’s four major works — The Radical Right, The End of Ideology, The Coming of Post-Industrial Society, and The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism — in light of contemporary politics. It’s first rate intellectual history, but in unashamed dialog with contemporary concerns about post-Trump America, with its neofascist right, its cultural warfare, its discontent with meritocracy and skepticism about science, etc. The result is a nuanced appraisal of what Bell got right in his own time, how his ideas continue to illuminate our own time, but also what he was largely blind to (including gender and race questions).