Religion as Social Control: Parsons and Foucault

In sociology and criminology, a consensus has emerged since the 1980s that there exist three basic forms of social control: informal, legal, and medical. However, Talcott Parsons developed a typology of social control that added a fourth type, namely religious control, which was needed to maintain c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chriss, James J. 1955- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: [publisher not identified] [2020]
In: Interdisciplinary journal of research on religion
Year: 2020, Volume: 16, Pages: 1-46
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Parsons, Talcott 1902-1979 / Foucault, Michel 1926-1984 / Religion / Social control
IxTheo Classification:AB Philosophy of religion; criticism of religion; atheism
AD Sociology of religion; religious policy
ZB Sociology
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Summary:In sociology and criminology, a consensus has emerged since the 1980s that there exist three basic forms of social control: informal, legal, and medical. However, Talcott Parsons developed a typology of social control that added a fourth type, namely religious control, which was needed to maintain consistency with his four-function analytical schema. In addition, since the 1980s Michel Foucault’s writings on social control have grown in influence in these fields. One particular aspect of Foucault’s work appears to be both complementary to and subsumable under Parsons’ grand AGIL schema. This is Foucault’s concept of pastoral power, whose four elements or dimensions can be understood as having functional significance for religious social control as developed by Parsons. The study of religion always brings to bear the problem of transcendence, and along the way I confront pertinent elements of idealist philosophy, and especially the phenomenology of Husserl, in this attempt to overcome some of the admitted difficulties in bringing together the thought of Parsons and Foucault.
ISSN:1556-3723
Contains:Enthalten in: Interdisciplinary journal of research on religion