Critical Social Theory Approaches to European Integration

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

  • Ian James Manners
Critical Social Theory (CST) in its broadest sense is a transdisciplinary approach to the social sciences that applies critique to the status quo in order to emancipate humans and the planet from the negative consequences of modernity.

A broad understanding of CST includes historical materialism, Frankfurt School theory, cultural theory, poststructural theory, feminist theory, and postcolonial theory. For example, Craig Calhoun’s seminal 1995 study of CST included engagements with Horkheimer, Adorno, and Habermas’ Frankfurt School; Derrida and Foucault’s postmodernism; Bourdieu’s habitus, field, and capital; Haraway and Fraser’s feminist theory; and hooks and Spivak’s politics of identity and recognition. The transdisciplinary approach of CST demands the reorganisation of disciplinary practices in order to transgress and transcend pre-existing frames of knowledge organisation found in the social sciences and humanities, in particular history, sociology, economics, ecology, and politics. In this context CST is an ‘interpenetrating body of work which demands and produces critique … [that] depends on some manner of historical understanding and analysis’. This historically-grounded critique is essential because ‘theory is always for someone and for some purpose’ since ‘theory constitutes as well as explains the questions it asks (and those it does not ask)’. Scholarship and activism within CST is concerned with understanding how ‘tradition’, the ‘status quo’, and the ‘mainstream’ are self-perpetuating practices of modernity that have significantly negative consequences for humans, society, and the planet as a whole. As Max Horkheimer put it in 1937, these conditions necessitate a ‘critical theory of society as it is, a theory dominated at every turn by a concern for reasonable conditions of life’. As discussed, CST is different to the other critical theoretical approaches in setting out a holistic, ecological, and progressive approach to the planetary politics that characterise the 21st century.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Routledge Handbook of Critical European Studies
EditorsDidier Bigo, Thomas Diez, Evangelos Fanoulis, Ben Rosamond, Yannis Stivachtis
Number of pages14
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherRoutledge
Publication date22 Dec 2020
Pages139-152
Chapter10
ISBN (Print)9781138589919
Publication statusPublished - 22 Dec 2020
SeriesCritical European Studies Series
ISSN1384-2145

Number of downloads are based on statistics from Google Scholar and www.ku.dk


No data available

ID: 233726197