Dennis Wrong

Dennis Wrong

Dennis Hume Wrong (born 1923) is an American sociologist, and emeritus professor of sociology in the Department of Sociology at New York University.[1]

Wrong is the author of several books, including two essay collections containing articles first published in cultural, intellectual, political and scholarly journals in the United States, Canada, and Britain. He has taught sociology at Princeton University, Rutgers, Brown University, the University of Toronto, the New School for Social Research Graduate Faculty, and for most of his career at New York University. He is currently retired and lives in Princeton.

The award for the best graduate paper of the year in the sociology department at New York University is named in honor of Dennis Wrong.

Views

In his book Power Wrong argued:

It has been argued that, like "freedom" or "justice" – those "big words which make us so unhappy", as Stephen Dedalus called them – "power" is an "essentially contested concept", meaning that people with different values and beliefs are bound to disagree over its nature and definition. It is claimed therefore that there cannot be any commonly accepted or even preferred meaning so long as people differ on normative issues as they are likely to do indefinitely, if not forever. "Power", however, does not seem to me to be an inherently normative concept. […] its scope and pervasiveness, its involvement in any and all spheres of social life, give it almost unavoidable evaluative overtones. Positive or negative, benign or malign, auras come to envelop it, linking it still more closely to ideological controversy. Yet power as a generic attribute of social life is surely more like the concepts of "society", "group" or "social norm" than like such essentially and inescapably normative notions as "justice", "democracy" or "human rights". (Wrong 2002: viii)

Books

  • The Persistence of the Particular, 2005
  • Reflections on a Politically Skeptical Era, 2003, Transaction Publishers
  • The Oversocialized Conception of Man, 1999
  • The Modern Condition: Essays at Century’s End, 1998, Stanford UP
  • Power: Its Forms, Bases and Uses, 1995, Transaction Publishers
  • Readings in Introductory Sociology
  • The Problem of Order: What Unites and Divides Society, 1995
  • Skeptical Sociology, 1976
  • Makers of Modern Social Science: Max Weber, 1970

References


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