The Problem with (Historical) Processes: Reflections on an Undertheorized Topic – LECTURE

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Date / time: 15 October, 5:30 pm

Location
German Historical Institute London (and via Zoom)


The Problem with (Historical) Processes: Reflections on an Undertheorized Topic - LECTURE

 

Join us in person or online for our first German Historical Institute London Lecture this autumn!

Wolfgang Knöbl (Hamburg Institute for Social Research) will kick off our series on the ‘History of the Social Sciences’ with a talk on ‘The Problem with (Historical) Processes: Reflections on an Undertheorized Topic’.

Talk of ‘social processes’ is widespread in historiography as well as in the social sciences; process terms such as industrialization, urbanization, individualization, secularization, etc. are ubiquitous. Nevertheless, it is usually rather unclear what processes actually are, how they should be theorized, and what types of processes can be distinguished. The lecture will 1) pose the question of why these process terms came to dominate the social sciences in the first place; 2) attempt to prove the thesis that process claims inevitably entail narrative elements; and 3) conclude that plausible process claims cannot be made without knowledge of narratological arguments.

Wolfgang Knöbl was a professor at the Institute for Sociology, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, before he became Director of the Hamburg Institute for Social Research in 2015. His main research interests are in the fields of political and historical sociology, social theory, and the history of sociology. His most recent book is Die Soziologie vor der Geschichte: Zur Kritik der Sozialtheorie (2022), and he is currently finishing a volume on the history and sociology of violence in Germany after 1945.

Please visit our website to get your free ticket: https://www.ghil.ac.uk/events/lectures.