Books by Maxim Waldstein
MA Thesis, Central-European University, Warsaw, 1998
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The Mangle in Practice, eds. Andrew Pickering and Keith Guzik (Duke University Press, 2009), 2009
In The Mangle of Practice (1995), the renowned sociologist of science Andrew Pickering argued for... more In The Mangle of Practice (1995), the renowned sociologist of science Andrew Pickering argued for a reconceptualization of research practice as a “mangle,” an open-ended, evolutionary, and performative interplay of human and non-human agency. While Pickering’s ideas originated in science and technology studies, this collection aims to extend the mangle’s reach by exploring its application across a wide range of fields including history, philosophy, sociology, geography, environmental studies, literary theory, biophysics, and software engineering.
The Mangle in Practice opens with a fresh introduction to the mangle by Pickering. Several contributors then present empirical studies that demonstrate the mangle’s applicability to topics as diverse as pig farming, Chinese medicine, economic theory, and domestic-violence policing. Other contributors offer examples of the mangle in action: real-world practices that implement a self-consciously “mangle-ish” stance in environmental management and software development. Further essays discuss the mangle as philosophy and social theory. As Pickering argues in the preface, the mangle points to a shift in interpretive sensibilities that makes visible a world of de-centered becoming. This volume demonstrates the viability, coherence, and promise of such a shift, not only in science and technology studies, but in the social sciences and humanities more generally.
Contributors: Lisa Asplen, Dawn Coppin, Adrian Franklin, Keith Guzik, Casper Bruun Jensen,Yiannis Koutalos, Brian Marick, Randi Markussen, Andrew Pickering, Volker Scheid, Esther-Mirjam Sent, Carol Steiner, Maxim Waldstein
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Empire De/Centered: New Spatial Histories of Russia and the Soviet Union, ed. by Sanna Turoma and Maxim Waldstein (Routledge), 2013
In 1991 the Soviet empire collapsed, at a stroke throwing the certainties of the Cold War world i... more In 1991 the Soviet empire collapsed, at a stroke throwing the certainties of the Cold War world into flux. Yet despite the dramatic end of this 'last empire', the idea of empire is still alive and well, its language and concepts feeding into public debate and academic research. Bringing together a multidisciplinary and international group of authors to study Soviet society and culture through the categories of empire and space, this collection demonstrates the enduring legacy of empire with regard to Russia, whose history has been marked by a particularly close and ambiguous relationship between nation and empire-building, and between national and imperial identities. Parallel with this discussion of empire, the volume also highlights the centrality of geographical space and spatial imaginings in Russian and Soviet intellectual traditions and social practices; underlining how Russia's vast geographical dimensions have profoundly informed Russia's state and nation-building, both in practice and concept. Combining concepts of space and empire, the collection offers a reconsideration of the Soviet imperial legacy by studying its cultural and societal underpinnings from previously unexplored perspectives. In so doing it provides a reconceptualization of the theoretical and methodological foundations of contemporary imperial and spatial studies, through the example of the experience provided by Soviet society and culture.
ASIN : B00FG268EO
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
This book examines the history of Yuri Lotman's Tartu(or Moscow-Tartu) School of Semiotics, which... more This book examines the history of Yuri Lotman's Tartu(or Moscow-Tartu) School of Semiotics, which was active in the Soviet Union in the 1960s-1980s, and combines a comparative perspective on the Tartu paradigm with close attention to its social context. Comparing Tartu with other major idioms in cultural theory from Russian Formalism to (post-)structuralism, this study reconstructs its evolution from the early ideal of "exact science" to a variety of conceptual frameworks which combined an emphasis on the autonomy of cultural texts with elaborate analysis of the social and intellectual environment of their production and reception. Working from life history interviews, archival research, and textual analysis, the book demonstrates how this evolution reflected and refracted the intellectuals' changing strategies of negotiating personal and professional autonomy and authority within Soviet academia. The Tartu School serves as a window into the distinctive character of intellectual production and the phenomenon of an unofficial public sphere in the post-Stalinist Soviet Union and challenges still dominant Cold War assumptions about the nature of Soviet science, culture, and society.
ISBN-10 : 9783639056051
ISBN-13 : 978-3639056051
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Papers by Maxim Waldstein
Amsterdam University College, 2018
The purpose of this report is to analyze the liberal arts and sciences curriculum at Amsterdam Un... more The purpose of this report is to analyze the liberal arts and sciences curriculum at Amsterdam University College with a focus on and through the lens of sociology. Some of its recommendations have been (partially) implemented. The 2018 AUC management, however, did not particularly like that this was "more than a mere report," and that this was an expert statement on the state of the institution and community. They wanted answers to their questions, while I defended the expert's right to ask my own questions. In effect, what emerged from a mere paper exercise is my draft vision of sociology and its place in liberal arts education, in addition to my vision for AUC and its future.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Slavic Review, 2010
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The Mangle in Practice: Science, Society, and Becoming, by Andrew Pickering and Keith Guzik, Dec 31, 2009
ISBN-13 : 978-0822343738
In The Mangle of Practice (1995), the renowned sociologist of sci... more ISBN-13 : 978-0822343738
In The Mangle of Practice (1995), the renowned sociologist of science Andrew Pickering argued for a reconceptualization of research practice as a "mangle," an open-ended, evolutionary, and performative interplay of human and non-human agency. While Pickering's ideas originated in science and technology studies, this collection aims to extend the mangle's reach by exploring its application across a wide range of fields including history, philosophy, sociology, geography, environmental studies, literary theory, biophysics, and software engineering.
The Mangle in Practice opens with a fresh introduction to the mangle by Pickering. Several contributors then present empirical studies that demonstrate the mangle's applicability to topics as diverse as pig farming, Chinese medicine, economic theory, and domestic-violence policing. Other contributors offer examples of the mangle in action: real-world practices that implement a self-consciously "mangle-ish" stance in environmental management and software development. Further essays discuss the mangle as philosophy and social theory. As Pickering argues in the preface, the mangle points to a shift in interpretive sensibilities that makes visible a world of de-centered becoming. This volume demonstrates the viability, coherence, and promise of such a shift, not only in science and technology studies, but in the social sciences and humanities more generally.
Contributors: Lisa Asplen, Dawn Coppin, Adrian Franklin, Keith Guzik, Casper Bruun Jensen, Yiannis Koutalos, Brian Marick, Randi Markussen, Andrew Pickering, Volker Scheid, Esther-Mirjam Sent, Carol Steiner, Maxim Waldstein
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Новое Литературное Обозрение, 2011
8 стр. в https://magazines.gorky.media/nlo/2011/4
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Slavic Review, 2011
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Contents: Introduction: empire and space: Russian and the Soviet Union in focus, Sanna Turoma and... more Contents: Introduction: empire and space: Russian and the Soviet Union in focus, Sanna Turoma and Maxim Waldstein Part I Eurasianism and Intellectual Construction of Space: The empire of language: space and structuralism in Russia's Eurasianism, Sergey Glebov Between Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia: Georgii Vernadskii's search for identity, Igor Torbakov Space as a destiny: legitimizing the Russian empire through geography and cosmos, Marlene Laruelle. Part II Spatial Science and Geographical Knowledge: The mapping of illiberal modernity: spatial science, ideology and the state in early 20th-century Russia, Nick Baron Regionalization, imperial legacy and the Soviet geographical tradition, Marina Loskutova. Part III Political and Cultural Economy of the (Post-)Soviet Space: The controlled space of socialist internationalism and its transgression: COMECON energy projects between 1970 and 1990, Ulrich Best The rearrangement of the post-Soviet space and the representation of Russia ...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Social Identities, 2002
The Russian empire has not yet succeeded in producing its own historical critique. This is a comm... more The Russian empire has not yet succeeded in producing its own historical critique. This is a commonplace of many studies of the Russian imperial experience (e.g. Engelstein, 2001; Thompson, 2000). Yet not all proposals on such a critique can be accepted, even if they are made by the empire’s ‘subalterns’. This is a starting point of the following reading of Ryszard Kapuscinski’s (1994) collection of travel notes entitled Imperium...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Realnost' i Subject, 2002
By analyzing various versions of the Modularity of Mind (MoM) Thesis, originally proposed by Jerr... more By analyzing various versions of the Modularity of Mind (MoM) Thesis, originally proposed by Jerry Fodor (1983), I discuss considerable advantages offered by the segmented and domain-specific architecture of the mind in comparison to more holistic images of cognition often presumed in socio-psychological theories of perception and learning. At the same time, I propose to retrieve the considerable explanatory power of the modularity theories from the assumption of the innateness of the modular cognitive functions and the image of one-way information processing. I argue that the relative encapsulation and selective domain-specificity of cognitive modules can be better understood within the framework of what I call an "ecological perspective on the architecture and evolution of the human mind," the perspective of which Vygotsky-Luria'с conception of activity is exemplary. The results are going to be appealing to the theorists and other students of human cognition who are trying to breach the gap between rationalism and empiricism as well as nativism and embedded/ situated cognition.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie, 2003
Эта статья продолжает разговор о значении “археологических” штудий Мишеля Фуко для современного г... more Эта статья продолжает разговор о значении “археологических” штудий Мишеля Фуко для современного гуманитарного знания (см.: НЛО. № 49). Подобно работам Лоры Энгельштейн и Александра Эткинда, она посвящена поиску путей переосмысления российского исторического опыта с учетом предпринятой Фуко и другими учеными проблематизации таких фундаментальных гуманитарных категорий, как “культура”, “цивилизация” и “нация”. В связи с этим особый интерес представляет опыт проводимых на Западе так называемых “постколониальных” исследований. Возникнув как направление в литературоведении, “постколониализм” на данном этапе представляет междисциплинарную гуманитарную исследовательскую программу, занимающуюся исторической критикой всевозможных форм этноцентризма, от европейского империализма до антиимпериалистического национализма стран “третьего мира”. Первоначально далекая от российской проблематики, постколониальная перспектива в последние годы привлекает пристальное внимание западных, особенно американских, специалистов по истории и культуре России (здесь можно упомянуть имена Л. Энгельштейн, М. Стайнберга, Ю. Слезкина, М. Бассина, а также участников нового журнала “Kritika”). Работа этих ученых, как представляется, достойна того, чтобы обратить на себя внимание как отечественной науки, так и западных “постколониалистов”, не занимающихся Россией.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Вестник МГУ, 1997
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Кентавр, 1993
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
New Literary Review (Moscow)
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Social Identities, Jan 1, 2002
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Media, Culture and Society, 2005, Volume 27, no. 5: 739-763, 2005
New technological advances usually produce waves of utopian hopes and aspirations. At present, th... more New technological advances usually produce waves of utopian hopes and aspirations. At present, this is true to the Internet, or ‘the web.’ Often portrayed as a borderless liberal space of equal opportunities and unconstrained communication, the web has recently gave a new impulse to the ideas of the public sphere and liberal democracy. However, contrary to these expectations, this paper emphasizes the profoundly contested nature of the communication on the net. Based on tracing an episode in the life of one Internet newsgroup, soc.culture.russian, the paper illuminates specific discursive practices through which domination, cooptation, resistance and exclusion enter the virtual space of Internet communications. Simultaneously, this study draws attention to the relative ‘truth’ of enthusiasm about the liberal affordances of the net. The Internet, it is argued, is liberal indeed but not so much due to the reign of liberal principles as due to the strategic advantage enjoyed by ‘liberal actors’ in newsgroup exchanges. It is thus the purpose of the study to trace the structuring impact of ‘liberal domination’ on the net.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History, Volume 8, Number 3, Summer 2007, pp. 561-596 , 2007
Topics:
Nationalism and language policy
Yuri Lotman as scholar and university administrator
Esto... more Topics:
Nationalism and language policy
Yuri Lotman as scholar and university administrator
Estonia during the Soviet period
Soviet linguistic policies in Estonia
Soviet Intelligentsia's "cosmopolitanism" and Estonian nationalism
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Ab Imperio, 2010
[English language essay. Russian abstract:] В своем эссе Максим Вальдштейн анализирует причины ма... more [English language essay. Russian abstract:] В своем эссе Максим Вальдштейн анализирует причины маргинальности исследований “второго мира” (т.е. истории и современности, в первую очередь, России и Восточной Европы) в контексте мировой/западной социальной и культурной теории. Высказываются также принципиальные соображения по поводу того, как эта маргинальность может быть преодолена. Истоки теоретической “незаметности” и неконсеквентности второго мира усматриваются в традиции описания этого региона в терминах пограничности, промежуточности и синкретичности по отношению к господствовавшим до недавнего времени в теории бинарным оппозициям типа Запад–Восток или модерн–традиция. Концептуализируемая в терминах Sonderweg’a (либо как отклонение от западной нормы, либо как “природа” российской цивилизации), эта промежуточность выводила и часто продолжает выводить второй мир за рамки доминирующих теоретических конструкций. Однако осуществляемая в последние десятилетия критика эссенциализма в гуманитарных и общественных науках способна радикально изменить ситуацию. Автор показывает, каким образом рассмотренная в контексте таких разных, но в равной мере антиэссенциалистских направлений, как постколониальные исследования и современная историческая социология, пограничность второго мира предстает в качестве богатого, но пока мало использованного потенциала научного мышления в неэссенциалистских терминах – терминах, подчеркивающих гибридность и сетевой характер социальных отношений и культурных конструктов. Эссе рассматривает условия, возможности и некоторые последствия углубления диалога между исследованиями второго мира и указанными научными течениями. Особенное внимание уделяется тому, как осуществляющаяся в рамках постколониальных исследований “провин-циализация Европы” может послужить ступенькой к действительной “депровинциализации второго мира”.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Books by Maxim Waldstein
The Mangle in Practice opens with a fresh introduction to the mangle by Pickering. Several contributors then present empirical studies that demonstrate the mangle’s applicability to topics as diverse as pig farming, Chinese medicine, economic theory, and domestic-violence policing. Other contributors offer examples of the mangle in action: real-world practices that implement a self-consciously “mangle-ish” stance in environmental management and software development. Further essays discuss the mangle as philosophy and social theory. As Pickering argues in the preface, the mangle points to a shift in interpretive sensibilities that makes visible a world of de-centered becoming. This volume demonstrates the viability, coherence, and promise of such a shift, not only in science and technology studies, but in the social sciences and humanities more generally.
Contributors: Lisa Asplen, Dawn Coppin, Adrian Franklin, Keith Guzik, Casper Bruun Jensen,Yiannis Koutalos, Brian Marick, Randi Markussen, Andrew Pickering, Volker Scheid, Esther-Mirjam Sent, Carol Steiner, Maxim Waldstein
ASIN : B00FG268EO
ISBN-10 : 9783639056051
ISBN-13 : 978-3639056051
Papers by Maxim Waldstein
In The Mangle of Practice (1995), the renowned sociologist of science Andrew Pickering argued for a reconceptualization of research practice as a "mangle," an open-ended, evolutionary, and performative interplay of human and non-human agency. While Pickering's ideas originated in science and technology studies, this collection aims to extend the mangle's reach by exploring its application across a wide range of fields including history, philosophy, sociology, geography, environmental studies, literary theory, biophysics, and software engineering.
The Mangle in Practice opens with a fresh introduction to the mangle by Pickering. Several contributors then present empirical studies that demonstrate the mangle's applicability to topics as diverse as pig farming, Chinese medicine, economic theory, and domestic-violence policing. Other contributors offer examples of the mangle in action: real-world practices that implement a self-consciously "mangle-ish" stance in environmental management and software development. Further essays discuss the mangle as philosophy and social theory. As Pickering argues in the preface, the mangle points to a shift in interpretive sensibilities that makes visible a world of de-centered becoming. This volume demonstrates the viability, coherence, and promise of such a shift, not only in science and technology studies, but in the social sciences and humanities more generally.
Contributors: Lisa Asplen, Dawn Coppin, Adrian Franklin, Keith Guzik, Casper Bruun Jensen, Yiannis Koutalos, Brian Marick, Randi Markussen, Andrew Pickering, Volker Scheid, Esther-Mirjam Sent, Carol Steiner, Maxim Waldstein
Nationalism and language policy
Yuri Lotman as scholar and university administrator
Estonia during the Soviet period
Soviet linguistic policies in Estonia
Soviet Intelligentsia's "cosmopolitanism" and Estonian nationalism
The Mangle in Practice opens with a fresh introduction to the mangle by Pickering. Several contributors then present empirical studies that demonstrate the mangle’s applicability to topics as diverse as pig farming, Chinese medicine, economic theory, and domestic-violence policing. Other contributors offer examples of the mangle in action: real-world practices that implement a self-consciously “mangle-ish” stance in environmental management and software development. Further essays discuss the mangle as philosophy and social theory. As Pickering argues in the preface, the mangle points to a shift in interpretive sensibilities that makes visible a world of de-centered becoming. This volume demonstrates the viability, coherence, and promise of such a shift, not only in science and technology studies, but in the social sciences and humanities more generally.
Contributors: Lisa Asplen, Dawn Coppin, Adrian Franklin, Keith Guzik, Casper Bruun Jensen,Yiannis Koutalos, Brian Marick, Randi Markussen, Andrew Pickering, Volker Scheid, Esther-Mirjam Sent, Carol Steiner, Maxim Waldstein
ASIN : B00FG268EO
ISBN-10 : 9783639056051
ISBN-13 : 978-3639056051
In The Mangle of Practice (1995), the renowned sociologist of science Andrew Pickering argued for a reconceptualization of research practice as a "mangle," an open-ended, evolutionary, and performative interplay of human and non-human agency. While Pickering's ideas originated in science and technology studies, this collection aims to extend the mangle's reach by exploring its application across a wide range of fields including history, philosophy, sociology, geography, environmental studies, literary theory, biophysics, and software engineering.
The Mangle in Practice opens with a fresh introduction to the mangle by Pickering. Several contributors then present empirical studies that demonstrate the mangle's applicability to topics as diverse as pig farming, Chinese medicine, economic theory, and domestic-violence policing. Other contributors offer examples of the mangle in action: real-world practices that implement a self-consciously "mangle-ish" stance in environmental management and software development. Further essays discuss the mangle as philosophy and social theory. As Pickering argues in the preface, the mangle points to a shift in interpretive sensibilities that makes visible a world of de-centered becoming. This volume demonstrates the viability, coherence, and promise of such a shift, not only in science and technology studies, but in the social sciences and humanities more generally.
Contributors: Lisa Asplen, Dawn Coppin, Adrian Franklin, Keith Guzik, Casper Bruun Jensen, Yiannis Koutalos, Brian Marick, Randi Markussen, Andrew Pickering, Volker Scheid, Esther-Mirjam Sent, Carol Steiner, Maxim Waldstein
Nationalism and language policy
Yuri Lotman as scholar and university administrator
Estonia during the Soviet period
Soviet linguistic policies in Estonia
Soviet Intelligentsia's "cosmopolitanism" and Estonian nationalism
In his critical assessment of Lipovetsky’s project, Waldstein points to its residual essentialism and teleology. In addition to traditional genealogy, or the search for roots and origins, he advocates more consistently embracing the Foucauldian project of “genealogy,” aimed at fragmenting the unified and discovering heterogeneity in what seems to be consistent with itself. In practice, this means not only engaging seriously with the late twentieth century Western reflexivity toward the project of the Enlightenment but also recovering and bringing into the conversations the “native” critical resources. As examples of such resources, Waldstein cites the less understood and valued ideas of Yuri Lotman. The expected outcome of such engagements is the renegotiation of the key assumptions of Russia’s current academic and intellectual discourse and reinvigoration of the public dialogue.
At the time when the interview was taken, Prof. Kuipers was the head of the Department of Sociology at the University of Amsterdam
The notion of “the moral development of the human species” has almost disappeared from the sociological theorizing and research as a result of the decades of often justified criticisms of this notion from post-positivistic and post-modernist perspectives. While political and moral philosophers have recently been actively reclaiming the idea of moral progress, we, sociologists, have largely ignored this trend. In this paper, I propose some reasons for revisiting this attitude and outline a project of how relevant debates can be reinterpreted from a sociological perspective. I proceed from the idea that sociological theory—from Durkheim to Parsons, Simmel to Elias, and Mead to Habermas—has a rich tradition to discussing moral development in terms like “value generalization,” “social learning” and “the civilizing process.” Disentangled from the vestiges of the 19th century notion of unilinear, deterministic and Eurocentric notion of “moral progress”(and “decline”), these ideas, I argue, are still fit to guide us interpreting contemporary research data and current social controversies. To the “idealistic” (the development of human reason) and biological-deterministic (evolutionary) approaches, sociology is able to offer a “materialistic” alternative, which directs the researcher’s attention to the changing forms of association and the developments in social technologies. In particular, I outline the interrelations and analogies between the developments in social technologies of control and surveillance (including the “technologies of the self”) and the trends in material technologies, especially communication technologies. In addition to these conceptual benefits, I explore the practical implications of the proposed perspective on moral development for analyzing and informing current public controversies on such issues as marriage equality and the refugee crisis.