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Part III: reintroducing and refining social structure in social history.


There is widespread agreement that attention to social structure has declined in historical research over the past two decades, partly as a result of changes in the classic structures of industrial society and the decline of Marxism, partly as a result of the cultural turn. There is far less agreement as to whether this matters much. Social historians who take advantage of the cultural turn and its frequent amorphousness on class, risk appearing as outdated out·dat·ed  
adj.
Out-of-date; old-fashioned.


outdated
Adjective

old-fashioned or obsolete

Adj. 1.
 throwbacks, even by scholars who have also tired of the cultural emphasis.

Why, then, discuss some form of revival? Societies do organize inequality, and understanding their systems and the ways these systems change and persist, is a fundamental responsibility of historians who attend to the nature of societies and the social experience. There's an obvious contemporary twist as well: as historians have turned away from precise examination of systems of inequality, inequality has in fact been deepening deep·en  
tr. & intr.v. deep·ened, deep·en·ing, deep·ens
To make or become deep or deeper.

Noun 1. deepening - a process of becoming deeper and more profound
 in many societies, and with it issues of poverty and a stiffening stiff·en  
tr. & intr.v. stiff·ened, stiff·en·ing, stiff·ens
To make or become stiff or stiffer.



stiff
 of hierarchy. The goal of connecting the social past to the social present, and of bringing wider publics to some understanding of these connections, may well demand a return to issues of structuring.

Advocating greater attention to the analysis of social structure, often though not always involving attention to social class, does not require insistence on a sterile sterile /ster·ile/ (ster´il)
1. unable to produce offspring.

2. aseptic.


ster·ile
adj.
1. Not producing or incapable of producing offspring.

2.
 or purely quantitative anatomical anatomical /ana·tom·i·cal/ (an?ah-tom´i-kal) pertaining to anatomy, or to the structure of an organism.

an·a·tom·i·cal or an·a·tom·ic
adj.
1. Concerned with anatomy.

2.
 approach. Three additions, at the least, are essential. First is a recognition that a finer-grained analysis, into subgroups of, say, larger entities like the middle class, is often desirable and possible--the subgroups may derive from particular income or work categories, but also from clusterings around issues of culture or taste. Second, deriving from the cultural turn but predating it in social history itself, structure must be intertwined with lived experience, with the perceptions and usually multifold mul·ti·fold  
adj.
Numerous and varied; manifold.
 identities of participants. The old interest in structure, including mobility, must combine with the results of linguistic and cultural analysis, while adding to a purely cultural approach a greater interest in material realities. This hybrid approach includes of course the understanding that power relationships are not political alone, that various facets of life define and emerge from the organization of inequality; and also that social structural analysis, like the social history of the state, must avoid simple models of imposition and resistance toward more interactive frameworks. Third, it is vital to see different aspects of social structure as particularly salient at different times--there is no set repertoire of classes, and indeed structuring, rather than structure, best conveys the unfolding of systems of inequality over time.

And of course there are creative disagreements about how to approach social structure and what, if any, theoretical frameworks to apply. The two papers that follow concur CONCUR - ["CONCUR, A Language for Continuous Concurrent Processes", R.M. Salter et al, Comp Langs 5(3):163-189 (1981)].  on the importance of dealing with social structure, including its political manifestations, but they differ considerably on both focus and approach. While not providing a single model, the potential debate suggests the vitality of the issues involved. Attention to social structuring is not a matter of reactionary revival; it will contribute to new understandings of the past and of the emergence of contemporary systems.

By Peter Stearns Peter Stearns is a professor of history at George Mason University, where he is currently provost (since January 1, 2000) with almost 40 years of experience as a teacher and administrator behind him.  

George Mason University Named after American revolutionary, patriot and founding father George Mason, the university was founded as a branch of the University of Virginia in 1957 and became an independent institution in 1972.  
COPYRIGHT 2006 Journal of Social History
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Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Stearns, Peter
Publication:Journal of Social History
Date:Mar 22, 2006
Words:524
Previous Article:The state and social history.
Next Article:The cultural turn and a new social history: folk dance and the renovation of class in social history.
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