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The Companion to Hispanic S… Whose Promised Land?

The Origins of American Social Science (Ideas in Context)

Author Dorothy Ross
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Category History
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Book Details
Author(s)Dorothy Ross
ISBN / ASIN052142836X
ISBN-139780521428361
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,495,787
CategoryHistory
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Focusing on the disciplines of economics, sociology, political science, and history, this book examines how American social science came to model itself on natural science and liberal politics. Professor Ross argues that American social science receives its distinctive stamp from the ideology of American exceptionalism, the idea that America occupies an exceptional place in history, based on her republican government and wide economic opportunity. Under the influence of this national self-conception, Americans believed that their history was set on a millennial course, exempted from historical change and from the mass poverty and class conflict of Europe. Before the Civil War, this vision of American exceptionalism drew social scientists into the national effort to stay the hand of time. Not until after the Civil War did industrialization force Americans to confront the idea and reality of historical change. The social science disciplines had their origin in that crisis and their development is a story of efforts to evade and tame historical transformation in the interest of exceptionalist ideals. This is the first book to look broadly at American social science in its historical context and to demonstrate the central importance of the national ideology of American exceptionalism to the development of the social sciences and to American social thought generally.
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