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Producing Parsons' reputation: Early critiques of Talcott Parsons' social theory and the making of a caricature
Authors:B. Robert Owens
Affiliation:1. MA candidate at the University of Chicago, pursuing a degree in Social Science;2. His research interests are modern American intellectual history, the history and sociology of science and the history of social theory. This article is a modified extract of his undergraduate senior thesis, written at Harvard University and researched primarily in the Talcott Parsons Papers held in the Harvard Archives, the C. Wright Mills Papers at the University of Texas at Austin, and the Robert Merton Papers at Columbia University.
Abstract:This article examines the critical responses to Talcott Parsons' first major work, The Structure of Social Action (1937), and his two subsequent books, Toward a General Theory of Action and The Social System (both 1951). Because Parsons' work was the subject of such virulent debate, we cannot fully understand Parsons' impact on the discipline of sociology without understanding the source and nature of those early criticisms. I trace the responses to Parsons, first through book reviews and private letters and then in the more substantial statements of C. Wright Mills, George Homans, and Alvin Gouldner, from the largely positive but superficial reception of Structure to the polemics that followed Parsons' 1951 works. In the late 1930s and 1940s, Parsons' reputation grew steadily but there remained no careful reception of Structure, fostering resentment toward Parsons in some quarters while precluding a sophisticated understanding of his work. After 1951, a few critics capitalized on that tension, writing sweeping rejections of Parsons' work that spoke to a much broader audience of sociologists. That dynamic, coupled with Parsons' own indifference toward his harshest critics, produced a situation in which many sociologists simply chose not to read Parsons in the 1950s and 1960s, reinforcing a caricature and distorting perceptions of Parsons' place in mid‐twentieth‐century American sociology. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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