Varieties of second modernity: the cosmopolitan turn in social and political theory and research
The theme of this special issue is the necessity of a cosmopolitan turn in social and political theory. The question at the heart of this introductory chapter takes the challenge of 'methodological cosmopolitanism', already addressed in a Special Issue on Cosmopolitan Sociology in this journal (Beck and Sznaider 2006), an important step further: How can social and political theory be opened up, theoretically as well as methodologically and normatively, to a historically new, entangled Modernity which threatens its own foundations? How can it account for the fundamental fragility, the mutability of societal dynamics (of unintended side-effects, domination and power), shaped by the globalization of capital and risks at the beginning of the twenty-first century? What theoretical and methodological problems arise and how can they be addressed in empirical research? In the following, we will develop this 'cosmopolitan turn' in four steps: firstly, we present the major conceptual tools for a theory of cosmopolitan modernities; secondly, we de-construct Western modernity by using examples taken from research on individualization and risk; thirdly, we address the key problem of methodological cosmopolitanism, namely the problem of defining the appropriate unit of analysis; and finally, we discuss normative questions, perspectives, and dilemmas of a theory of cosmopolitan modernities, in particular problems of political agency and prospects of political realization.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Copyright holders | © 2010 London School of Economics and Political Science |
| Keywords | ISI, second modernity, methodological cosmopolitanism, world risk society, individualization, cosmopolitization, political agency |
| Departments | Sociology |
| DOI | 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2010.01320.x |
| Date Deposited | 19 Oct 2010 16:09 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/29600 |
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