Ritzer presents his 'The McDonalization of Society' as a social critique on the nationalization of modern society. In this article I will analyze the underlying assumptions of his critique. By means of a meta-theoretical analysis, I examine Ritzer's views on modernity and rationality. This analysis reveals that Ritzer holds a rather dualistic view of the relation between man and society. Ritzer does not give much thought to the ambivalence of modernity. I wil further argue that Ritzer uses a resticted idea of rationality. As a result, he can not escape the pessimism which also marked Weber's vision of the future. Ritzer can only offer his reader the hope that an awareness of McDonzalization will unleash a critical attitude towards the inevi...
Near the start of his keynote address at last summer’s CMS5, Professor Ritzer boldly declared that h...
The writings of Weber and Taylor have some strong affinities. Both start from the anthropological id...
The writings of Weber and Taylor have some strong affinities. Both start from the anthropological id...
textabstractRitzer presents his 'The McDonalization of Society' as a social critique on the national...
George Ritzer, known as the writer of voluminous textbooks in sociological theory, has recently prod...
The suggestions which Max Weber and Jurgen Habermas offer to ameliorate the moral, ethical and pract...
This article is not available through ChesterRep.Associated with the Frankfurt School, Jurgen Haberm...
This essay seeks to discover just how far it can be argued that rationality of modernity can do so b...
At first I describe the interaction between communicative action and Lebenswelt (life-world) as the ...
In the East, even in the most parts of the West, modernity has been an omnipresent phenomenon. It be...
The writings of the Austrian novelist and essayist Robert Musil provide sociology with vital problem...
Habermas rejects a class-specific approach to social analysis and political practice and, in renewin...
The main question I address in this thesis is whether critique of norms and social practices has th...
Robert Musil wrote Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften as a critical intervention in the intellectual debate...
As societies forfeit increasingly their homogeneous character and cross-cultural encounters are bein...
Near the start of his keynote address at last summer’s CMS5, Professor Ritzer boldly declared that h...
The writings of Weber and Taylor have some strong affinities. Both start from the anthropological id...
The writings of Weber and Taylor have some strong affinities. Both start from the anthropological id...
textabstractRitzer presents his 'The McDonalization of Society' as a social critique on the national...
George Ritzer, known as the writer of voluminous textbooks in sociological theory, has recently prod...
The suggestions which Max Weber and Jurgen Habermas offer to ameliorate the moral, ethical and pract...
This article is not available through ChesterRep.Associated with the Frankfurt School, Jurgen Haberm...
This essay seeks to discover just how far it can be argued that rationality of modernity can do so b...
At first I describe the interaction between communicative action and Lebenswelt (life-world) as the ...
In the East, even in the most parts of the West, modernity has been an omnipresent phenomenon. It be...
The writings of the Austrian novelist and essayist Robert Musil provide sociology with vital problem...
Habermas rejects a class-specific approach to social analysis and political practice and, in renewin...
The main question I address in this thesis is whether critique of norms and social practices has th...
Robert Musil wrote Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften as a critical intervention in the intellectual debate...
As societies forfeit increasingly their homogeneous character and cross-cultural encounters are bein...
Near the start of his keynote address at last summer’s CMS5, Professor Ritzer boldly declared that h...
The writings of Weber and Taylor have some strong affinities. Both start from the anthropological id...
The writings of Weber and Taylor have some strong affinities. Both start from the anthropological id...