The Science of the State by Barrow, Clyde W. (9783111599298) | Browns Books
Image for The Science of the State

The Science of the State : Race, Class, and National Identity in US Political Science, 1835 to 1945

Part of the Class, Power, and the State in the 21st Century series
See all formats and editions

The Science of the State: Race, Class, and National Identity in US Political Science, 1835-1945 traces the origins of US political science as it emerged from the Staatwissenschaft paradigm of post-Hegelian nineteenth century Germany, particularly through the influence of Johann Caspar Bluntschli, Wilhelm G.

F. Roscher, and Ludwig von Gumplowicz. The US science of the state emphasized three concepts – race, class, and national identity – which generated two competing theories of the state: a metaphysical theory of the state anchored in the concept of race, and an economic theory of the state anchored in the concept of class.

By the 1920s, a new sociological theory of the state laid the foundations for a paradigm shift from the science of the state to pluralism in US political science.

The author suggests that the origins of US political science structured its development as a dialectical conflict between the official discipline’s ideological defense of economic and racial inequality and a critical political science, which challenged the structural inequalities of US capitalism and liberal democracy.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£88.00
Product Details
De Gruyter
3111599299 / 9783111599298
Hardback
01/06/2026
Germany
400 pages, 9 Illustrations, black and white
155 x 230 mm, 500 grams

We have stock available for immediate despatch, and should this not cover your order, if more stock isn’t already on the way, it will be ordered immediately to cover your order.

This typically takes 1-2 weeks, depending on availability from the publisher.