Research

  1. The Centenary of Max Weber's Protestant Ethic
  2. Max Weber's Dissertation and His Personal Life, 1886-1893
  3. The Protestant Ethic and Weber's Family History
  4. Schools of Asceticism
  5. Pilgrimage and Tourism
  6. Current projects and research questions
  7. Reply to Stephen K. Sanderson, "Reforming Theoretical Work in Sociology: A Modest Proposal" (Perspectives [Newsletter of the ASA Theory Section, August 2005; available here)

1. The Centenary of Max Weber's Protestant Ethic

The years 2004-2005 mark the centenary of the original Protestant Ethic essays. Bill Swatos and I edited a collection of essays addressing the essays original context, historical reception, and ongoing relevance (Paradigm Publishers, 2005). The contributors include Philip Gorski, Stephen Kalberg, Peter Kivisto, Hartmut Lehmann, Donald Nielsen, Martin Riesebrodt, and Lawrence Scaff. My contributions are the Introduction as well as a chapter entitled “Rational Capitalism, Traditionalism, and Adventure Capitalism: New Research on the Weber Thesis.”

This CHOICE review provides a brief glimpse of its contents:

The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (PESC) is Max Weber's controversial, multilayered work, consistently ranked as one of the most influential sociological texts ever written. The collective scholarship of this edited volume provides a grand overview of the history, assessment, and implications from a century of reflection on his text. The essays are fresh and interesting, and readily encourage an enlightened, contextual reading of Weber. They affirm the validity of the Weber thesis in supporting a causal connection between ascetic Protestantism emerging from the Reformation and the development of modern rational capitalism—although with many clarifications, several caveats, and one alternative narrative connecting the Reformation to capitalism in Europe. Several essays introduce little-known aspects of Weber's life and scholarship, especially the influence of his 1904 travels in the US. Recommended along with Fritz Ringer's Max Weber: An Intellectual Biography and editor Charles Camic et al.'s Max Weber's Economy and Society: A Critical Companion (2005), this collection reveals the immense sophistication of Weber's work, however incomplete and fragmentary it remains. In addition, while exploring the history of PESC, readers gain an important education in the development of 20th-century sociology in the US. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries.—G. Marti, Davidson College


2. Max Weber's Dissertation and and His Personal Life, 1886-1893

In 2003, I published a translation of Max Weber's dissertation and first book, entitled The History of Commercial Partnerships in the Middle Ages. For more information about Weber's dissertation, go here. For more information about his personal life, go here.

I have revisited the issue of usury in Weber's work, which received its most extensive (and previously not acknowledged) treatment in this book, in “Max Weber on Usury and Medieval Capitalism: From The History of Commercial Partnerships to The Protestant Ethic(Max Weber Studies 4 [2004]: 51-75).

Reviews of The History of Commercial Partnerships have appeared in the following journals:

  1. Canadian Journal of Sociology Online May-June (2004) (Peter Breiner). Available here.
  2. Contemporary Sociology 33 (2004): 253-54 (Paul McLean).
  3. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 17 (2004): 639-50 (Lawrence A. Scaff).
  4. Journal of the History of Economic Thought 26 (2004): 137-140 (Guy Oakes).
  5. Max Weber Studies 4.1 (2004): 125-28 (Keith Tribe).
  6. International Social Science Review 80 (2005): 81-82 (Michael Hirsch).

See also: “At Long Last, Dissertations by Max Weber and Jacques Derrida Are Published in English.” “Hot type” Column in Chronicle of Higher Education 49, 30 (2003): A14.

 

 

A list of errata/changes to the translation can be found here.

3. The Protestant Ethic and Weber's Family History

Max Weber's Protestant Ethic continues to be an influential work in sociology and other social sciences. The 1919-20 German version is part of the Potsdamer Internet-Ausgabe of his writings. A recent English translation by Stephen Kalberg complements the older translation by Talcott Parsons. I have discussed the strengths and weaknesses of Kalberg's (2001) translation in "Max Weber's Protestant Ethic in the 21st Century" (International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 16 [2002]: 133-46; see also my response to his reply in ibid., 17 (2003): 331-32). My review of Jere Cohen's book, Protestantism and Capitalism: The Mechanisms of Influence (deGruyter, 2002), which provides a new reflection on an old topic, was published in the Canadian Journal of Sociology (28 [2003]: 575-81).

Weber's thinking in the Protestant Ethic, as well as in his dissertation, in Economy and Society, and in other writings was influenced by Weber's status as what Guenther Roth has called scion of the cosmopolitan bourgeoisie. For my review essay on Roth's magnum opus of Weber's family history, Max Webers deutsch-englische Familiengeschichte 1800-1950. Mit Briefen und Dokumenten (Tübingen: Mohr, 2001), entitled How Well Do We Know Max Weber After All? A New Look at Max Weber and His Anglo-German Family Connections” (International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 17 [2003]: 307-27), go here.


 4. Schools of Asceticism

In graduate school I became interested in Max Weber's Protestant Ethic thesis, which led me to explore precursors to inner-worldly asceticism in medieval religious groups. I studied orthodox monastic and lay groups, but what interested me most were medieval heretical groups, such as the Waldensians and the Cathars. Out of this interest developed what ultimately turned into a book, Schools of Asceticism: Ideology and Organization in Medieval Religious Communities (University Park, PA: Penn State Press, 1998). It explores how religious ethics (doctrines and other elements of belief structures) and organizational arrangements of religious communities interacted to shape their members' conduct, or how they acted in everyday life. Social class and gender are part of the analysis. The book received the Best Book Award of the  Sociology of Religion Section of the American Sociological Association in 1999.

For an updated version on the chapter on the Cathars, see my article “Sociological Explanations of Cathar Success and Tenacity in Languedoc: A New Perspective Focusing on the ‘Houses of Heretics.’” Heresis: Revue semestrielle d’histoire des dissidences médiévales 38 (2003): 31-49.

For a more extensive look at monasticism, see my contribution “Monasticism: Christian Monasticism,” pp. 6131-36 in The Encyclopedia of Religion, 2nd ed., vol. 9, edited by Lindsay Jones (New York: Macmillan, 2005), and for a short overview of Waldensianism, “Waldensians,in Encyclopedia of Religious Freedom, edited by Catharine Cookson (New York: Routledge, 2003: 507-8).

Schools of Asceticism was reviewed in the following journals:  


5. Pilgrimage and Tourism - From the Middle Ages to Postmodernity

Pilgrims traversing an Alpine landscape (15th-century prayer book)

  More recently I have turned to the sociology of pilgrimage and tourism, and what can be described as increasingly fuzzy and diaphanous boundaries between the two types of travel. While at first sight it may seem that pilgrimage-commonly referred to as religiously motivated travel to a sacred place or person-and tourism-recreationally motivated travel to a place that offers regeneration or is of cultural interest-historically did not mix, forms of travel that in some ways combined the two go back to western antiquity and the Middle Ages. For example, some female medieval mystics used pilgrimage travel to transcend the rigid gender boundaries of the time and to educate themselves while on the road, and professional pilgrims undertook pilgrimages-by-proxy, by which they combined travel for the sake of another person's spiritual welfare with personal entertainment. 

Much more recent is the phenomenon of travel to what George Ritzer has called "cathedrals of consumption," perhaps part of the experience of postmodernity. As scholars have argued, when eliciting feelings of awe and the quasi-veneration of consumptive practices, these cathedrals may represent the equivalent of the pilgrimage centers of old. Other examples of a cultic consumption of sacred spaces include tourism to national shrines such as Graceland and to theme parks (e.g., Disney World). A related topic is virtual pilgrimage.

For a preliminary exploration of some of the issues mentioned above, see “The Sociology of Medieval Pilgrimage: Contested Views and Shifting Boundaries.” Pp. 51-74 in From Medieval Pilgrimage to Religious Tourism: The Social and Cultural Economics of Piety, edited by William H. Swatos, Jr., and Luigi Tomasi. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002, and “From Religious Pilgrimage to Postmodern Tourism.” Forthcoming in Tourism, Religion, and Spiritual Journeys, edited by Dallen J. Timothy and Daniel H. Olsen (London: Routledge).

.


6. Current projects and research questions

Beyond issues of postmodern pilgrimage/tourism, I am working on a ms. entitled The Earliest Max Weber: The Origins of his Vergesellschaftung Thesis” and doing research on the return of adventure capitalism.  


7. Reply to Stephen K. Sanderson, "Reforming Theoretical Work in Sociology: A Modest Proposal"

Mon dieu! I am one of those type of people whom Stephen Sanderson in his contribution “Reforming Theoretical Work in Sociology” (Perspectives 28, 2) wishes to push out of the discipline: I am fairly certain he would find my scholarship to display an “excessive concern” with classical sociological theorists; I like reading and discussing some of the new or “chic” European theorists, even if they espouse “Gallicisms” and the types of radical social transformations involving class, gender, and ethnicity he in his reactionary view appears to detest; and I relish exploring theoretical issues in the classical canon that he undoubtedly considers “abstruse and arcane.” I also like to peruse an existing journal, The Journal of Classical Sociology, which he thinks has yet to be invented for those incurable souls who disagree with his positivist agenda. But to my defense I should state that when compared to Sanderson’s writing such classical and modern social theory is, as some would say, what a French pâté is to a German Leberwurst or an American hamburger: infinitely more subtle and refined. Bon appétit.

 

 

 


HOME