Lederer, David (2013) Sociology's "One Law": Moral Statistics, Modernity, Religion, and German Nationalism in the Suicide Studies of Adolf Wagner and Alexander von Oettingen. Journal of Social History, 46 (3). pp. 684-699. ISSN 1527-1897
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Abstract
From the onset, moral statistics were influenced by religious discourse. During
the nineteenth century, Adolf Wagner discovered the "One Law" of sociology:
Protestants always kill themselves more often than Catholics. Deployed by his col
league, the Baltic nationalist theologian Alexander von Oettingen, it became a
moral-statistical plank in the modernity thesis and supported a Prussian master
narrative of history. Accordingly, it justified the unification of Germany according
to the small German model of a Kulturnation excluding Catholic Austria. This
interpretation, in turn, influenced subsequent generations of German sociologists,
who described modernity in idealist and spiritual terms. In this, they differed from
the more mechanistic and materialist theories of French sociologists, in particular
Émile Durkheim.
Item Type: | Article |
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Keywords: | Theology; Social history; Morality; Demography; Sociology of religion; Religion; Protestantism; Germanicism; Suicide; Statistics; History; Social aspects; Sociology; Analysis; Modernism; Nationalism; Suicides & suicide attempts; |
Academic Unit: | Faculty of Arts,Celtic Studies and Philosophy > History |
Item ID: | 11488 |
Identification Number: | 10.1093/jsh/shsl |
Depositing User: | David Lederer |
Date Deposited: | 29 Oct 2019 15:36 |
Journal or Publication Title: | Journal of Social History |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press |
Refereed: | Yes |
Related URLs: | |
URI: | https://mu.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/11488 |
Use Licence: | This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available here |
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