Lawrence Scaff offered a fascinating preview of his forthcoming book, Max Weber in America, at a sociology seminar in Ann Arbor this week. Scaff has written extensively on Weber in the past, and this current research is particularly intriguing and stimulating. The book offers a careful reconstruction of Weber's visit to the United States in 1904, and it then goes on to provide a brilliant interpretation of the "discovery" of Weber in the United States in the 1940s and forward.
Let's start with the obvious: it is startling for those of us who are not Weber experts to learn that Weber spent time in the United States at all. It's weirdly dissonant for me to imagine this quintessentially German sociologist, wandering the streets of Chicago and the plains of Oklahoma. What did he make of Chicago 1904? How did it influence his development as a sociological thinker?
It's even more eye-opening to learn that Weber met W. E. B. Dubois during his visit, and may have shifted some of his later thinking in fairly important ways as a result of his exposure to some of Dubois' ideas about race in America. (Dubois' The Souls of Black Folk appeared in 1903.)
Scaff also writes quite a bit about the intellectual connections between Weber and William James during this period. He explores important parallels between The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Nature and The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. This is significant, because the first part of The Protestant Ethic was written and presented for publication just before the trip to America, whereas the second part was written after the visit.
Scaff seems to have done a great job of piecing together archival materials to arrive at a new telling of the story of the trip to America with Marianne. So this addition to the biography of Weber is of great value all by itself. (Marianne Weber's biography of Max provides only limited information about the trip; Max Weber.)
But even more important is the effort that Scaff makes to get inside the developing sociological imagination of the thinker. This is what is most intriguing about the book, and what makes me most eager to read it when it appears in early winter.
One of Scaff's goals, then, is to "blow up" the sociology expressed across Weber's writings and try to see how the parts might be fitted together in other ways. Can the canonical Weber be interpreted in significantly different and more nuanced ways? This is a particularly interesting and fertile question, and it contributes directly to the important project of trying to rethink the making of modern sociological imagination and frameworks.
Several members of the Ann Arbor seminar commented on the fact that there are some parallels between Weber's interpretation of the "American difference" (chiefly a higher level of civic involvement than in Germany) and the main lines of Tocqueville's observations of America in Democracy in America. Scaff shared that two things are known about this question -- first, that Weber never refers to Tocqueville anywhere in his corpus; and second, that he read Democracy in America in French at some point, since an edition of the book annotated in his hand is contained in his book collection in Heidelberg. (Klaus Offe comments on this parallel in Reflections on America: Tocqueville, Weber and Adorno in the United States, based on the Adorno Lecture that he presented in Frankfurt in 2003. Here is a limited Google Books view (link).)
This is all really important material for those of us who are interested in the contingent development of modern sociology. So Scaff's book is one that I'm eagerly anticipating when it appears in January.
Here is the table of contents for the book.
MAX WEBER IN AMERICA
Lawrence A. Scaff
Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface
Introduction
Part I. The American Journey
Chapter 1 Thoughts about America
Traveling to Progressive America
The Horizons of Thought
A “Spiritualist” Construction of the Modern Economy?
Chapter 2 The Land of Immigrants
Arriving in New York
Church and Sect, Status and Class
Settlements and Urban Space
Chapter 3 Capitalism
The City as Phantasmagori
Hull House, the Stockyards, and the Working Class
Character as Social Capital
Chapter 4 Science and World Culture
The St. Louis Congress: Unity of the Sciences?
The Last Time for a Free and Great Development: American
Exceptionalism?
The Politics of the Arts and Crafts
Gender, Education and Authority
Chapter 5 Remnants of Romanticism
The Lure of the Frontier
The Problems of Indian Territory
Nature, Traditionalism, and the New World
The Significance of the Frontier
Chapter 6 The Color Line
Du Bois and the Study of Race
The Lessons of Tuskegee
Race and Ethnicity, Class and Caste
Chapter 7 Different Ways of Life
Colonial Children
Nothing Remains except Eternal Change
Ecological Interlude
Inner Life and Public World
The Cool Objectivity of Sociation
Chapter 8 The Protestant Ethic
Spirit and World
William James and His Circle
Ideas and Experience
Chapter 9 American Modernity
Strange Contradictions
Becoming American
Cultural Pluralism
Chapter 10 Interpretation of the Experience
The Discourse about America
A Way Out of the Iron Cage?
America in the Work
Part II. The Work in America
Chapter 11 The Discovery of the Author
Author and Audience
Networks of Scholars
Translation History
The Disciplines
Chapter 12 The Creation of the Sacred Text
An American in Heidelberg
Parsons Translates “The Protestant Ethic and the ‘Spirit’ of Capitalism”
Chapter 13 The Invention of the Theory
Gerth and Mills Publish a Weber “Source Book”
Parsons’ “Theory of Social and Economic Organization”
Weber Among the Emigrés
Weberian Sociology and Social Theory
Weber Beyond Weberian Sociology
Appendix I: The Webers’ Itinerary
Appendix II: Selected Correspondence with Americans, 1904-1905
Bibliographic Notes
Index