Basing his research on Gramsciâs theory of hegemony, Rehmann provides a comprehensive socio-analysis of Max Weberâs political and intellectual position in the ideological network of his time. Max Weber: Modernisation as Passive Revolution shows that, even though Weber presents his science as âvalue-freeâ, he is best understood as an organic intellectual of the bourgeoisie, who has the mission of providing his class with an intense ethico-political education. Viewed as a whole, his writings present a new model for bourgeois hegemony in the transition to âFordismâ. Weber is both a sharp critic of a âpassive revolutionâ in Germany tying the bourgeois class to the interests of the agrarian class, and a proponent of a more modern version of passive revolution, which would foreclose a socialist revolution by the construction of an industrial bloc consisting of the bourgeoisie and labour aristocracy.
Jan Rehmann, Dr. phil., habil., teaches critical theories and social analysis at Union Theological Seminary in New York City and philosophy and the Free University in Berlin. He is co-editor of the Historical-Critical Dictionary of Marxism (HKWM) and the journal Das Argument. His latest book is Theories of Ideology. The Powers of Alienation and Subjection. (Brill: Leiden, Boston 2013).
Preface to the English Edition
Introduction to the First Edition (1998)
PART ONE: THE MODEL OF AMERICANISM
1.1 Weberâs 1904 Journey to America
1.2 The Ambivalent Fascination of Capitalism
1.3 Taylorism and Fordism in the Stockyards
1.4 The Alliance of Religion and Business
1.5 The âDisplacementâ of Religion from the State into Civil Society (Marx)
1.6 The Sect as Germ Cell of a Superior Model of Societalisation
PART TWO: OUTLINES OF A FORDIST PROJECT OF MODERNISATION FOR GERMANY
2.1 The Programme of the 1895 Freiburg Inaugural Address
2.2 The Katheder Socialist Milieu
2.3 The Imperialist Critique of the Agrarian Class
2.4 A Homogenous Stock Market Elite with a Coherent Concept of Honour
2.5 The Critique of the âPassive Revolutionâ in Germany
2.5.1 The âEntailed Estateâ
2.5.2 The âFeudal Pretensionsâ of the German Bourgeoisie
2.5.3 Caesarism, Bonapartism and âPassive Revolutionâ
2.6 Proposals for the Development of a âCaesarism without a Caesarâ
2.6.1 The Shortcomings of a âValue-Rationalâ Critique of Weber
2.6.2 âUniversal Bureaucratisationâ as an Ineluctable Fate
2.6.3 Parliamentarism as a Superior Mechanism for the Selection of Leaders
2.6.4 The Construction of an Industrial Bloc of Capitalists and Workers
2.6.5 A New Model for the âAssimilationâ of Hostile Groups into the State
2.7 The Integration of the Modern Industrial Proletariat into Bourgeois Society
2.7.1 Paul Göhreâs Study on the Heterogeneity of Social Democratic Common Sense
2.7.2 âClass Struggleâ as a Mode of Integration into Bourgeois Society
2.7.3 Linking âWorker Honourâ to the Force Field of Nationalism
2.7.4 The Absorption of the Labour Aristocracy into the Bourgeoisie
2.7.5 A Graduated System of Corporatist Cooptation
2.8 The Return of the Charismatic âCaesarâ to Modern Politics
2.8.1 The Verticalist Narrowing of the Concept of Charisma
2.8.2 Plebiscitary Charisma as Correlate of the Party Machine
2.8.3 From the Parliamentary Selection of Leaders to âPlebiscitary Leader Democracyâ
PART FOUR: THE IDEAL-TYPICAL CONSTRUCTION OF AN ORIGINARY PROTESTANT-CAPITALIST SPIRIT
4.1 The Ethico-Political Stakes of a âPurely Historical Accountâ
4.2 The Basic Operation: Isolation of the 'Mental and Spiritual Particularities'
4.2.1 The Critique of Offenbacherâs Comparison of Denominations
4.2.2 On the Social Profile of the Catholic Bloc
4.2.3 Weber's Departure from Offenbacherâs Model of Interaction
4.2.4 Weber's Vacillation between a âStrongâ and a âWeakâ Thesis on Protestantism
4.2.5 The Ethical Mobilisation of Economic Subjects
4.3 From German âCultural Protestantismâ to Anglo-American âCivil Religionâ
4.3.1 Cultural Protestantism as a Religious Ideology of Bourgeois Modernisation
4.3.2 âKulturkampfâ and the âDebate on Inferiorityâ
4.3.3 Protestant âCultureâ as an Integrational Cipher in the Crisis of Orientation
4.3.4 Ritschl and Weber: A New Arrangement of Ethical Resources
4.3.5 Jellinek and Weber: Linking up with Anglo-American Mythistory
4.4 Weber and Simmel: The Psychological âDeepeningâ of Marxian Value Form Analysis
4.4.1 Benjamin Franklin's Ethos â Utilitarian or Puritan?
4.4.2 From the Capitalist Standpoint of Valorisation to the âHumanâ Interest in Acquisition
4.4.3 The Formal Resemblance of Money and God
4.4.4 From the Ethos of Acquisition to the Work Ethos
4.4.5 Capitalist or Entrepreneurial Spirit?
4.5 Werner Sombartâs âOvercomingâ of Marxism
4.5.1 The Historical School as âDigestive Scienceâ (Rosa Luxemburg)
4.5.2 The âFurther Developmentâ of Marxism as a Glorification of Capitalism
4.5.3 The Origin of Bourgeois Monetary Assets
4.5.4 Two Components of the âSpirit of Capitalismâ
4.5.5 The âIncorporation of the Proletariat into the National Communityâ
4.6 Weberâs Dislodgement of the âSpirit of Capitalismâ from Capitalism
4.6.1 A Tautological Conceptual Arrangement
4.6.2 The Exclusion of Sombartâs âAdventure Capitalismâ
4.6.3 Purging the Capitalist Spirit of the Materiality of Capitalist Domination
4.6.4 The Detachment of the Spirit from the Economic Form
4.7 Weber's Perspective: Capitalist Spirit as a Popular Mass Movement
4.7.1 Renaissance Man or Reformation Man?
4.7.2 The Interminability of the Controversy on the Spiritual Origin of Capitalism
4.7.3 The Hidden Theme: The Bourgeoisieâs Popular-National Achievement of Hegemony
4.7.4 Outlook: The Social Components of Weber's Orientalist Sociology of Religion
Appendix
Bibliography
Index of Names
Index of Subjects
In sociology, politics and religion departments; areas of methodology, social theory and cultural studies; in the thriving Gramsci studies in the US and the UK.