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Irving Louis Horowitz

Irving Louis Horowitz (September 25, 1929 – March 21, 2012) was an American sociologist, author, and college professor who wrote and lectured extensively in his field, and his later years came to fear that it risked being seized by left-wing ideologues. He proposed a quantitative index for measuring a country's quality of life, and helped to popularize "Third World" as a term for the poorer nations of the Non-Aligned Movement. He was considered by many to be a neoconservative, although he maintained that he had no political adherence.[1]

Early life and education

Horowitz was born in New York City on September 25, 1929, to Louis and Esther Tepper Horowitz. He was educated at City College of New York (now City College of the City University of New York, or CUNY), B.S., 1951; Columbia University, New York City, M.A., 1952; and the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Ph.D., 1957.[2]

Academic positions and consultancies

After beginning his career as an assistant professor of social theory at the University of Buenos Aires, 1956–1958, Horowitz spent the next forty-plus years at various academic institutions in India, Tokyo, Mexico, and Canada. In addition to his teaching positions, he was an advisory staff member of the Latin American Research Center, 1964–1970; and consultant to the International Education Division, Ford Foundation, 1959-1960.

From 1963 to 1969, Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis. He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Queen's University in Canada, and the University of California, and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina, Israel, and India; a member of the advisory board of the Institute for Scientific Information, 1969–1973; consulting editor for Oxford University Press, 1969–74, for Aldine-Atherton Publishers, 1969–1972; an external board member of the Radio Marti and Television Marti Programs of the United States Information Agency, beginning in 1985; chair of the board of the Hubert Humphrey Center, Ben Gurion University, Israel, 1990–1992; and served as an external board member of the methodology section of the research division, United States General Accounting Office. Horowitz's latest academic post was Hannah Arendt University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University, since 1992.

Transaction Publishers and Society

He was the founding president of the Transaction Society, whose Transaction Publishers has been an international publisher of scholarly monographs, including academic monographs that need not have been viewed as profitable. He was the founding editor of Society, which published articles on sociology, politics, and social criticism. It has been purchased by Springer Verlag.

Scholarly contributions

As the author of more than twenty-five books and editor of numerous other titles, Horowitz analyzed such diverse topics as the influence of Sun Myung Moon and the Unification Church on American politics, the future of book publishing, and politics in Cuba. Horowitz was the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development. He was also chairman of Transaction Publishers.

Early in his career, Horowitz was a student of Leftist sociologist C. Wright Mills, a Texas-born professor at Columbia University whose most significant books include, White Collar, The Power Elite, and The Sociological Imagination. Horowitz edited two posthumous collections of Mills' work, including The cultural apparatus.[3][4]

Over the several decades until his death Horowitz worked to develop a political sociology that can measure the extent of a society's personal freedom and State-sanctioned violence. As a result of his work, a standard for the quality of life in any particular nation or social system has been constructed based on the number of people arbitrarily killed, maimed, injured, incarcerated, or deprived of basic civil liberties. Horowitz tried to build a bridge between his current analysis of state power and authority and his earlier studies of comparative international stratification and development. He was key to introducing the phrase "Third World" into the lexicon of social research. Horowitz articulated the view that republication of previous publications in different formats is necessary in the social sciences to disseminate research results and make them useful to society.[5]

Horowitz wrote about genocide: “First comes the act and then comes the word: first [the crime of] genocide is committed and then the language emerges to describe a phenomenon."[6] He published lasting contributions on the subject, including Genocide: State power & mass murder;[7] Taking lives: Genocide & state power;[8] and "Genocide and the reconstruction of social theory: Observations on the exclusivity of collective death"[9] in Armenian Review. Horowitz's last scholarly pieces on genocide were his preface to R. J. Rummel's Death by government,[10] and his essay on state-sponsored terror, "Counting Bodies. The Dismal Science of Authorized Terror"[11] in Patterns of Prejudice. In Summer 1994, a volume of essays in honour of Horowitz was published by Transaction Publishers.[12]

In 1990, he published an autobiography, a brief "sociological biography" rather than one that is intellectual or intimate. This was Daydreams and nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem childhood,[13] for which he received the National Jewish Book Award in 1991.[14] It is an unromanticized look at growing up as the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants in the streets of predominantly black Harlem, New York City, in the 1930s. Among his most recent books are Tributes: Personal reflections on a century of social research;[15] and Behemoth: Main currents in the history and theory of political sociology.[16]

A list of scholarly publications including more than two hundred works by Horowitz is found at the beta-version of Google Scholar.[17]

Criticism of Marxist trends in sociology

Horowitz is noted for his 1994 work The Decomposition of Sociology, in which he argued that the discipline is in decline due to overly-ideological theory, a shift away from American sociology and toward European (particularly Marxist) trends which he labelled as "left-wing fascists" and "professional savages", and an apparent lack of relevance to policy making.[1] He wrote: "The decomposition of sociology began when this great tradition became subject to ideological thinking, and an inferior tradition surfaced in the wake of totalitarian triumphs."[18] Sociologist George Steinmetz challenged Horowitz. In a 2005 article in The Michigan Quarterly Review titled "The Cultural Contradictions of Irving Louis Horowitz", he wrote that "historical, cultural and geographic" context remained critical.[1]

Personal life

In 1951, he married Ruth Narowlansky, with whom he had two children, Carl and David; they were divorced in 1964. He married Danielle Salti in 1964; the couple was divorced in 1978. He married Mary Ellen Curtis in 1979. He died on March 21, 2012. In 1973, Horowitz was one of the signers of the Humanist Manifesto II.[19]

Honors and awards

Throughout his academic career, Horowitz received many awards, including a special citation from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace for his 1957 book, The Idea of War and Peace in Contemporary Philosophy; recognition by Time magazine as a leader of a new breed of radical sociologist;[20] the Centennial Medallion from St. Peter's College, Jersey City, New Jersey, 1971, for outstanding contribution to a humanistic social science; and a Presidential Outstanding Achievement Award, 1985, from Rutgers University. He was a member of the Carnegie Council, American Association of Publishers, American Political Science Association, American Association for the Advancement of Science, and past president (1961–1962) of the New York State Sociological Society.

Selected works

  • The Anarchists (1964)[21]
  • Winners and Losers: Social and Political Polarities in America (1984); a criticism of left-wing fascism
  • Cuban Communism: 1959-2003. 11th edition.
  • The Long Night of Dark Intent: A Half Century of Cuban Communism. Transaction Publishers (2011).
  • The War Game, Transaction Publishers (2013), Edited and with a new Introduction,"Conflagration and Calculation," by Howard G. Schneiderman
  • Professing Sociology: Studies in the Life Cycle of the Social Sciences, Transaction Publishers (2014), with a new Introduction - "Fugitive Thoughts Tamed," by Howard G. Schneiderman

References

  1. ^ a b c Martin 2012.
  2. ^ Horner, Shirley. "ABOUT BOOKS", The New York Times, May 1, 1988. Accessed January 20, 2008.
  3. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis, ed. and introduction (1963) Power, politics, and people: The collected essays of C. Wright Mills. Oxford University Press.
  4. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis, ed. (1964) The new sociology: Essays in social science and social theory, in honor of C. Wright Mills. Oxford University Press.
  5. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis (1991). Communicating about ideas: The politics of scholarly publishing, 2d expanded ed. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 208.
  6. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis (1980). Taking lives: Genocide and state power. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, 183.
  7. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis (1976). Genocide: State power & mass murder. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books.
  8. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis (1980).Taking lives: Genocide & state power. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, 1980.
  9. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis (1984). "Genocide and the reconstruction of social theory: Observations on the exclusivity of collective death," Armenian Review 37: 1-21.
  10. ^ Rummel, R. J. (1994). Death by government. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books.
  11. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis (1999). "Counting Bodies. The Dismal Science of Authorized Terror." Patterns of Prejudice 23: 4-15.
  12. ^ Rist, Ray C., ed. (1994). The democratic imagination: Dialogues on the work of Irving Louis Horowitz. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
  13. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis (1990). Daydreams and nightmares: Reflections on a Harlem childhood. London: Jackson Publishing.
  14. ^ "National Jewish Book Award | Book awards | LibraryThing". www.librarything.com. Retrieved 2020-01-18.
  15. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis (2004). Tributes: Personal reflections on a century of social research. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0-7658-0218-X
  16. ^ Horowitz, Irving Louis (1999). Behemoth: Main currents in the history and theory of political sociology. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 1-56000-410-X
  17. ^ Albrecht, Richard: Leben Retten - Irving Louis Horowitz
  18. ^ Horowitz, Irving (1994) The Decomposition of Sociology Oxford University Press. p4
  19. ^ . American Humanist Association. Archived from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  20. ^ Time, January 5, 1970.
  21. ^ "Related Disciplines (Rev. of The Anarchists by Irving Louis Horowitz)". Journal of Economic Literature. 43 (4): 1173. 2005. ISSN 0022-0515. JSTOR 4129415.

Further reading

  • Martin, Douglas (March 26, 2012). "Irving Louis Horowitz, Sociologist, Dies at 82". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  • Waiser, Mindy (2012). "Irving Louis Horowitz". PS: Political Science and Politics. 45 (3): 552–553. ISSN 1049-0965. JSTOR 41691375.

irving, louis, horowitz, september, 1929, march, 2012, american, sociologist, author, college, professor, wrote, lectured, extensively, field, later, years, came, fear, that, risked, being, seized, left, wing, ideologues, proposed, quantitative, index, measuri. Irving Louis Horowitz September 25 1929 March 21 2012 was an American sociologist author and college professor who wrote and lectured extensively in his field and his later years came to fear that it risked being seized by left wing ideologues He proposed a quantitative index for measuring a country s quality of life and helped to popularize Third World as a term for the poorer nations of the Non Aligned Movement He was considered by many to be a neoconservative although he maintained that he had no political adherence 1 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Academic positions and consultancies 2 1 Transaction Publishers and Society 3 Scholarly contributions 3 1 Criticism of Marxist trends in sociology 4 Personal life 5 Honors and awards 6 Selected works 7 References 8 Further readingEarly life and education EditHorowitz was born in New York City on September 25 1929 to Louis and Esther Tepper Horowitz He was educated at City College of New York now City College of the City University of New York or CUNY B S 1951 Columbia University New York City M A 1952 and the University of Buenos Aires Argentina Ph D 1957 2 Academic positions and consultancies EditAfter beginning his career as an assistant professor of social theory at the University of Buenos Aires 1956 1958 Horowitz spent the next forty plus years at various academic institutions in India Tokyo Mexico and Canada In addition to his teaching positions he was an advisory staff member of the Latin American Research Center 1964 1970 and consultant to the International Education Division Ford Foundation 1959 1960 From 1963 to 1969 Horowitz was professor of sociology at Washington University in St Louis He has also been a visiting professor at Stanford University the University of Wisconsin Madison Queen s University in Canada and the University of California and a Fulbright Lecturer in Argentina Israel and India a member of the advisory board of the Institute for Scientific Information 1969 1973 consulting editor for Oxford University Press 1969 74 for Aldine Atherton Publishers 1969 1972 an external board member of the Radio Marti and Television Marti Programs of the United States Information Agency beginning in 1985 chair of the board of the Hubert Humphrey Center Ben Gurion University Israel 1990 1992 and served as an external board member of the methodology section of the research division United States General Accounting Office Horowitz s latest academic post was Hannah Arendt University Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Political Science at Rutgers University since 1992 Transaction Publishers and Society Edit He was the founding president of the Transaction Society whose Transaction Publishers has been an international publisher of scholarly monographs including academic monographs that need not have been viewed as profitable He was the founding editor of Society which published articles on sociology politics and social criticism It has been purchased by Springer Verlag Scholarly contributions EditAs the author of more than twenty five books and editor of numerous other titles Horowitz analyzed such diverse topics as the influence of Sun Myung Moon and the Unification Church on American politics the future of book publishing and politics in Cuba Horowitz was the founder of Studies in Comparative International Development He was also chairman of Transaction Publishers Early in his career Horowitz was a student of Leftist sociologist C Wright Mills a Texas born professor at Columbia University whose most significant books include White Collar The Power Elite and The Sociological Imagination Horowitz edited two posthumous collections of Mills work including The cultural apparatus 3 4 Over the several decades until his death Horowitz worked to develop a political sociology that can measure the extent of a society s personal freedom and State sanctioned violence As a result of his work a standard for the quality of life in any particular nation or social system has been constructed based on the number of people arbitrarily killed maimed injured incarcerated or deprived of basic civil liberties Horowitz tried to build a bridge between his current analysis of state power and authority and his earlier studies of comparative international stratification and development He was key to introducing the phrase Third World into the lexicon of social research Horowitz articulated the view that republication of previous publications in different formats is necessary in the social sciences to disseminate research results and make them useful to society 5 Horowitz wrote about genocide First comes the act and then comes the word first the crime of genocide is committed and then the language emerges to describe a phenomenon 6 He published lasting contributions on the subject including Genocide State power amp mass murder 7 Taking lives Genocide amp state power 8 and Genocide and the reconstruction of social theory Observations on the exclusivity of collective death 9 in Armenian Review Horowitz s last scholarly pieces on genocide were his preface to R J Rummel s Death by government 10 and his essay on state sponsored terror Counting Bodies The Dismal Science of Authorized Terror 11 in Patterns of Prejudice In Summer 1994 a volume of essays in honour of Horowitz was published by Transaction Publishers 12 In 1990 he published an autobiography a brief sociological biography rather than one that is intellectual or intimate This was Daydreams and nightmares Reflections on a Harlem childhood 13 for which he received the National Jewish Book Award in 1991 14 It is an unromanticized look at growing up as the son of Russian Jewish immigrants in the streets of predominantly black Harlem New York City in the 1930s Among his most recent books are Tributes Personal reflections on a century of social research 15 and Behemoth Main currents in the history and theory of political sociology 16 A list of scholarly publications including more than two hundred works by Horowitz is found at the beta version of Google Scholar 17 Criticism of Marxist trends in sociology Edit Horowitz is noted for his 1994 work The Decomposition of Sociology in which he argued that the discipline is in decline due to overly ideological theory a shift away from American sociology and toward European particularly Marxist trends which he labelled as left wing fascists and professional savages and an apparent lack of relevance to policy making 1 He wrote The decomposition of sociology began when this great tradition became subject to ideological thinking and an inferior tradition surfaced in the wake of totalitarian triumphs 18 Sociologist George Steinmetz challenged Horowitz In a 2005 article in The Michigan Quarterly Review titled The Cultural Contradictions of Irving Louis Horowitz he wrote that historical cultural and geographic context remained critical 1 Personal life EditIn 1951 he married Ruth Narowlansky with whom he had two children Carl and David they were divorced in 1964 He married Danielle Salti in 1964 the couple was divorced in 1978 He married Mary Ellen Curtis in 1979 He died on March 21 2012 In 1973 Horowitz was one of the signers of the Humanist Manifesto II 19 Honors and awards EditThroughout his academic career Horowitz received many awards including a special citation from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace for his 1957 book The Idea of War and Peace in Contemporary Philosophy recognition by Time magazine as a leader of a new breed of radical sociologist 20 the Centennial Medallion from St Peter s College Jersey City New Jersey 1971 for outstanding contribution to a humanistic social science and a Presidential Outstanding Achievement Award 1985 from Rutgers University He was a member of the Carnegie Council American Association of Publishers American Political Science Association American Association for the Advancement of Science and past president 1961 1962 of the New York State Sociological Society Selected works EditThe Anarchists 1964 21 Winners and Losers Social and Political Polarities in America 1984 a criticism of left wing fascism Cuban Communism 1959 2003 11th edition The Long Night of Dark Intent A Half Century of Cuban Communism Transaction Publishers 2011 The War Game Transaction Publishers 2013 Edited and with a new Introduction Conflagration and Calculation by Howard G Schneiderman Professing Sociology Studies in the Life Cycle of the Social Sciences Transaction Publishers 2014 with a new Introduction Fugitive Thoughts Tamed by Howard G SchneidermanReferences Edit a b c Martin 2012 Horner Shirley ABOUT BOOKS The New York Times May 1 1988 Accessed January 20 2008 Horowitz Irving Louis ed and introduction 1963 Power politics and people The collected essays of C Wright Mills Oxford University Press Horowitz Irving Louis ed 1964 The new sociology Essays in social science and social theory in honor of C Wright Mills Oxford University Press Horowitz Irving Louis 1991 Communicating about ideas The politics of scholarly publishing 2d expanded ed New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers 208 Horowitz Irving Louis 1980 Taking lives Genocide and state power New Brunswick NJ Transaction Books 183 Horowitz Irving Louis 1976 Genocide State power amp mass murder New Brunswick NJ Transaction Books Horowitz Irving Louis 1980 Taking lives Genocide amp state power New Brunswick NJ Transaction Books 1980 Horowitz Irving Louis 1984 Genocide and the reconstruction of social theory Observations on the exclusivity of collective death Armenian Review 37 1 21 Rummel R J 1994 Death by government New Brunswick NJ Transaction Books Horowitz Irving Louis 1999 Counting Bodies The Dismal Science of Authorized Terror Patterns of Prejudice 23 4 15 Rist Ray C ed 1994 The democratic imagination Dialogues on the work of Irving Louis Horowitz New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers Horowitz Irving Louis 1990 Daydreams and nightmares Reflections on a Harlem childhood London Jackson Publishing National Jewish Book Award Book awards LibraryThing www librarything com Retrieved 2020 01 18 Horowitz Irving Louis 2004 Tributes Personal reflections on a century of social research New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers ISBN 0 7658 0218 X Horowitz Irving Louis 1999 Behemoth Main currents in the history and theory of political sociology New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers ISBN 1 56000 410 X Albrecht Richard Leben Retten Irving Louis Horowitz Horowitz Irving 1994 The Decomposition of Sociology Oxford University Press p4 Humanist Manifesto II American Humanist Association Archived from the original on October 20 2012 Retrieved October 10 2012 Time January 5 1970 Related Disciplines Rev of The Anarchists by Irving Louis Horowitz Journal of Economic Literature 43 4 1173 2005 ISSN 0022 0515 JSTOR 4129415 Further reading EditMartin Douglas March 26 2012 Irving Louis Horowitz Sociologist Dies at 82 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Waiser Mindy 2012 Irving Louis Horowitz PS Political Science and Politics 45 3 552 553 ISSN 1049 0965 JSTOR 41691375 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Irving Louis Horowitz amp oldid 1145738880, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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