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The post-Enlightenment evolution of models of national society and state.The development of ideas of individual and collective actorhood, and the corresponding peripheralization of the concept of culture.
Chapter Two examines the origins of the canon of classical sociological theory and how this canon entered environmental sociology in the field’s early history. The analysis highlights the centrality of colonialism and imperialism, as well as mid-twentieth century liberalism and geopolitics – along with their ideological underpinnings – in shaping both ecological and social thought, as well as the discipline of sociology, with consequences for the later emergence of environmental sociology. The chapter closes by pointing to opportunities for further recovery of early critical perspectives lost, due in part to the process of canon formation and practices of social exclusion and academic marginalization, at great cost to the development of socio-ecological thought and action.
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