Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
http://ann.sagepub.com JANDY, EDWARD C. Charles Horton Cooley: His Life and His Social Theory. Pp. viii, 319. New York: The Dryden Press, 1942. $3.00
J.O. Hertzler The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 1943; 225; 261 DOI: 10.1177/0002716243225001105 The online version of this article can be found at: http://ann.sagepub.com
Published by:
http://www.sagepublications.com
On behalf of:
Additional services and information for The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science can be found at: Email Alerts: http://ann.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Subscriptions: http://ann.sagepub.com/subscriptions Reprints: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.nav Permissions: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav
Downloaded from http://ann.sagepub.com by Radu Baltasiu on November 27, 2007 1943 American Academy of Political & Social Science. All rights reserved. Not for commercial use or unauthorized distribution.
261
of the Max Weber thesis as to the connection of Protestantism and capitalism, and his inadequate attention to a viewpoint like that of H. Richard Niebuhr, whose name does not even appear in the fifteen-page bibliography. Other points of possible criticism are the inadequate differentiation of sect and church, and the tendency to identify the verbal professions of various religious groups with actual reality without any attention to massive discrepancies. It is possible, however, that the author may be planning to treat some of these points in the subsequent volumes, which will certainly be awaited with eagerness.
EPHRAIM FISCHOFF
given
to
self-analysis;
reticent, sensitive,
Hunter
College
JANDY, EDWARD C. Charles Horton Cooley: His Life and His Social Theory. Pp. viii, 319. New York: The Dryden Press, 1942. $3.00. Here is a sensitively written book about a most sensitive man. Begun as a doctoral
dissertation, it has quite obviously matured and mellowed over a period of years, until
it appears not only as a valuable contribution to sociological literature, but as a work of art in itself. Of the 269 pages of the text proper, 109 are devoted to Cooley the man and the thinker. (In my opinion, Chapter III, &dquo;Thoughts on Science and Method,&dquo; belongs in this category as well as Part I on &dquo;Life.&dquo;) Jandy was most fortunate in having com-
and unsociable man, but keenly observant and analytical of what he wished to see from his exclusive watchtower; a man withal intellectually and spiritually bold, defiant, and self-assured. One suspects that Jandy has done it so well because, in addition to a flair for personality analysis, he found in Cooley a congenial and compatible spirit. Though admitting discipleship, he avoids worship. Another person would have given us a very different treatment. Cooleys social theory, quite appropriately, is divided into two parts. Under &dquo;Human Nature and Personality&dquo; we find an analytical and critical examination of the individual and society, the nature of social reality, the development of self and personality (including the &dquo;looking-glass&dquo; self), the social genesis of mind, the phases of self (including his anticipation of the Adlerian superiority-inferiority complexes), and the social aspects of conscience and personal degeneracy. In &dquo;Some Phases of Social Organization&dquo; are treated primary groups and ideals, public opinion and democracy, social classes, and institutions (including his contributions to institutional economics). Cooley is concerned with sociology not so much as a science-certainly
a statistical, particularistic, experimenscience, redolent of methodology and research-but as an organic body of ideas and subjective generalizations arrived at by &dquo;open and watchful imagination&dquo; and &dquo;sympathetic imagination&dquo; (Cooleys terms), and coming out of ones own intellectual and artistic being as illuminated and confirmed by ones own life experiences. Cooley gets full credit for his original and seminal contributions. Jandys treatment of the theory gives adequate coverage, and most of it is very good; some of it has already been done better by others. Here is, however, the first systematic and comprehensive analysis. A bibliography and revealing notes are attached. This is a book that sociologists, psychologists, social psychologists, and economists should read. J. O. HERTZLER University of Nebraska
not
tal
years),
BARNES, HARRY ELMER, and OREEN M. RUEDI. The American Way of Life.
Downloaded from http://ann.sagepub.com by Radu Baltasiu on November 27, 2007 1943 American Academy of Political & Social Science. All rights reserved. Not for commercial use or unauthorized distribution.