Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/15070
Title: Social structures, power and resistance in monist sociology: (new) materialist insights
Authors: Alldred, P
Fox, NJ
Issue Date: 2017
Citation: Journal of Sociology, (2017)
Abstract: Though mainstream sociological theory has been founded within dualisms such as structure/agency, nature/culture, and mind/matter, a thread within sociology dating back to Spencer and Tarde (Karakayali, 2015) favoured a monist ontology that cut across such dualistic categories. This thread has been reinvigorated by recent developments in social theory, including the new materialisms, posthumanism and affect theories. Here we assess what a monist or ‘flat’ ontology means for sociological understanding of key concepts such as structures and systems, power and resistance. We examine two monistic sociologies: Bruno Latour’s ‘sociology of associations’ and DeLanda’s ontology of assemblages. Understandings of social processes in terms of structures, systems or mechanisms are replaced with a focus upon the micropolitics of events and interactions. Power is a flux of forces or ‘affects’ fully immanent within events, while resistance is similarly an affective flow in events producing micropolitical effects contrary to power or control.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/15070
ISSN: 1440-7833
Appears in Collections:Dept of Health Sciences Research Papers

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