Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes On Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Sociological Promise of Norbert Elias
- One Norbert Elias: Genesis of a Determined Thinker
- Two Knowledge, Science and Method: The Sociological Practice of Norbert Elias
- Three Norbert Elias’s Comparative Historical Sociology: Against Process Reduction
- Four Power and Process: Norbert Elias and the Paradox of Inequalities
- Five Norbert Elias and Shifting Gender Relations
- Six Travelling With Elias: Figurations and the Racialising Process in South Africa
- Seven Excitement Processes, Embodiment and Power Relations in Sport and Leisure
- Eight Warfare, Survival Units, National Habitus and Nationalism: Norbert Elias’s Contribution to Political Sociology
- Nine Elias’s Contribution to International Relations Theory: Towards a Global Sociology
- Ten Crime, Government and Civilisation: Rethinking Elias in Criminology
- Eleven Art and the Civilising Process
- Twelve From Social Mobility to Channels of Opportunity: Norbert Elias and Education
- Appendix: Published Works of Norbert Elias in English
- Index
Four - Power and Process: Norbert Elias and the Paradox of Inequalities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes On Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Sociological Promise of Norbert Elias
- One Norbert Elias: Genesis of a Determined Thinker
- Two Knowledge, Science and Method: The Sociological Practice of Norbert Elias
- Three Norbert Elias’s Comparative Historical Sociology: Against Process Reduction
- Four Power and Process: Norbert Elias and the Paradox of Inequalities
- Five Norbert Elias and Shifting Gender Relations
- Six Travelling With Elias: Figurations and the Racialising Process in South Africa
- Seven Excitement Processes, Embodiment and Power Relations in Sport and Leisure
- Eight Warfare, Survival Units, National Habitus and Nationalism: Norbert Elias’s Contribution to Political Sociology
- Nine Elias’s Contribution to International Relations Theory: Towards a Global Sociology
- Ten Crime, Government and Civilisation: Rethinking Elias in Criminology
- Eleven Art and the Civilising Process
- Twelve From Social Mobility to Channels of Opportunity: Norbert Elias and Education
- Appendix: Published Works of Norbert Elias in English
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Power and inequality are perennial social and sociological concerns that continue to be a major point of discussion and debate in the social sciences. In this chapter, we centrally consider how Elias and other process sociologists have examined such issues through an engagement with how differences in power chances and inequality develop across time and space in tandem with other wider social processes. Here, processes of ‘functional democratisation’ and related shifting balances of power between different social groups form the principal foci of our concern. Our central argument is that these ‘figurational’ approaches to power and inequality offer particular utility for apprehending an apparent paradox of contemporary societies: how it is that inequalities between certain groups (chiefly those associated with a social class) are increasing, while inequalities between other groups (principally those associated with gender, race/ethnicity, sexuality, formerly colonised and former colonisers, Western states and the ‘rest’ of the world) appear to be reducing.
The ostensible reduction in such inequalities can be seen to relate to a broadening array of ‘equalisation conflicts’ such as those that find expression in the hard-won expansion of legal rights for women and associated rise of feminist movements over the past two centuries, including most recently the #MeToo movement; the succession of movements relating to the rights of non-white groups, including the Civil Rights movement in the United States and, more latterly, Black Lives Matter; the anti-colonial movements of the twentieth century; and the integration struggles of a range of marginalised groups, especially those associated with LGBTQ+ groups. Such processes, it should be noted from the outset, are here approached as entailing overall shifts in the character and degree of inequalities between historically hegemonic and subjugated groups, but are understood as shifts that by no means mark the end or eradication of inequalities, nor as processes that are securely guaranteed to continue. Moreover, as we have suggested, our concern is with how these shifts towards reductions in inequality in relation to some axes of social differentiation have arisen in tandem with growing inequalities in relation to others.
We commence this chapter with a brief outline of the ‘paradox of inequalities’ alluded to above through a consideration of global trends data from the UN.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Anthem Companion to Norbert Elias , pp. 71 - 90Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2023