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Conference Report on ‘The Renewal of Sociology in South Africa’ Guest Editor: Jìmí O. Adésínà

Sociology beyond despair: Recovery of nerve, endogeneity, and epistemic intervention

Presidential Address South African Sociological Association Annual Congress, 2005 The Renewal of Sociology in South Africa University of Limpopo, Polokwane 26 June 2005

Pages 241-259 | Published online: 11 Jan 2012
 

Abstract

Sociology as a scholarly vocation within the university in South Africa is bedevilled with the claims of its demise. Both the discipline and a cross-section of its practitioners seem beset with ‘status anxiety’ and what I call ‘status ambiguity’ In this presidential address, delivered to the 2005 Congress of the South African Sociological Association (SASA), I examine these claims. The paper examines the sources of the anxiety. It argues that the claims of sociology's death are grossly exaggerated, as Mark Twain might have put it. I argue that if we were to operate on a wider canvas we might have persuaded ourselves to the position that the ebbs and flows in a discipline like sociology are not evidence of ‘death’, ‘fall’ or whatever else we might want to call it; it is not even an evidence of a discipline that is yet to attain maturity. The key to doing ‘sociology beyond despair’ and the recovery of disciplinary nerve requires a commitment to endogeneity, with a distinct commitment to epistemic intervention in global sociology; it requires us to take our locales seriously; it requires us to take ourselves seriously.

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