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NY Times, Sept. 11, 2019
Immanuel Wallerstein, Sociologist With Global View, Dies at 88
By Neil Genzlinger
Immanuel Wallerstein, a sociologist who shook up the field with his
ideas about Western domination of the modern world and the very nature
of sociological inquiry, died on Aug. 31 at his home in Branford, Conn.
He was 88.
His daughter Katharine Wallerstein said the cause was an infection.
Dr. Wallerstein had written several books on Africa, where he had
traveled extensively, when he published “The Modern World-System I:
Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World-Economy in
the Sixteenth Century,” the first of four landmark volumes, in 1974.
That work took a broader sociological approach than was common at the
time, one that instead of looking at a country or society or ethnic
group favored a global view that encompassed history and economic evolution.
“Wallerstein’s book aims to achieve nothing less than a coherent
understanding of the making of the modern world,” the sociologist
Gertrud Lenzer wrote in a review in The New York Times, “and the unique
development within it of capitalism.”
“It is,” she added, “one of the few significant historical analyses to
arise out of sociology in recent years.”
Dr. Wallerstein came to his expanded view of the field as a result of
his time abroad.
“I credit my African studies with opening my eyes both to the burning
political issues of the contemporary world and to the scholarly issues
of how to analyze the history of the modern world‑system,” he wrote in a
career summary on his website. “It was Africa that was responsible for
undoing the more stultifying parts of my educational heritage.”
A 2011 book of essays by various scholars on the impact of his work,
“Immanuel Wallerstein and the Problem of the World,” extrapolated on the
influence of Africa on his thinking.
“The misery and violence he saw there, which did not seem to be
disappearing with the end of colonial rule, were not determined wholly
or even preponderantly by local actors or realities on the ground,” the
book’s introduction said, adding, “The pertinent lines of causality
stretched out of sight across the globe.”
The picture Dr. Wallerstein saw was not complimentary to the West, or to
capitalism.
“I had the gut feeling in the 1950s,” he wrote in “The Essential
Wallerstein” (2000), “that the most important thing that was happening
in the 20th-century world was the struggle to overcome the control by
the Western world of the rest of the world.”
World-systems analysis, as he called his approach, occupied only a
modest part of his wide-ranging scholarship, which also included
numerous other books, among them “Unthinking Social Science” (1991),
“After Liberalism” (1995), “The Decline of American Power” (2003), “The
Uncertainties of Knowledge” (2004) and “The End of the World as We Know
It: Social Science for the 21st Century” (1999).
He was also fully engaged with the times, writing on current events
throughout his career and sometimes being directly involved in them. In
1968, as a professor at Columbia University, he was part of a faculty
committee that sought to mediate the student uprising there. In 2014 he
delivered a lecture to more than 1,000 students in Iran, where his
writings have been widely read because of his criticism of capitalism
and his view that the United States is on a downward trajectory.
An activist thread ran through his career and his writings.
“I have argued that world-systems analysis is not a theory but a protest
against neglected issues and deceptive epistemologies,” he wrote.
“It is an intellectual task,” he continued, “that is and has to be a
political task as well, because — I insist — the search for the true and
the search for the good is but a single quest.”
Immanuel Maurice Wallerstein was born on Sept. 28, 1930, in Manhattan
and grew up in the Bronx. His father, Lazar, was trained as a rabbi and
became a physician; his mother, Sara (Günsberg) Wallerstein, was an artist.
Dr. Wallerstein earned a bachelor’s degree at Columbia in 1951, served
in the Army from 1951 to 1953, then received a master’s degree at
Columbia in 1954 with a thesis on McCarthyism. In 1955 the Ford
Foundation awarded him a fellowship that allowed him to study in Africa,
and he continued to travel throughout the continent after receiving his
Ph.D. at Columbia in 1959 and joining the university faculty.
He wrote two books on the continent in the 1960s, “Africa: The Politics
of Independence” and “Africa: The Politics of Unity.”
“I shifted my area of empirical concern from my own society to Africa in
the hope either that I would discover various theories confirmed by what
I found there or that a look at distant climes would sharpen my
perception by directing my attention to issues I would otherwise have
missed,” he wrote in “The Modern World-System I.” “I expected the former
to happen. But it was the latter that came to pass.”
His time in Africa, where colonialism was still in force, showed him the
limits of much sociological scholarship.
“It was a false perspective to take a unit like a ‘tribe’ and seek to
analyze its operations,” he wrote, “without reference to the fact that,
in a colonial situation, the governing institutions of a ‘tribe,’ far
from being ‘sovereign,’ were closely circumscribed by the laws (and
customs) of a larger entity of which they were an indissociable part,
the colony.”
The student uprising at Columbia in 1968, as well as other events in
that tumultuous year, resulted in a 1969 book, “University in Turmoil:
The Politics of Change.”
In 1971 he moved to McGill University in Montreal, and in 1976 he became
distinguished professor of sociology at the State University of New York
at Binghamton. He had been a senior research fellow at Yale University
since 2000.
Dr. Wallerstein married Beatrice Friedman in 1964. In addition to her
and his daughter Katharine, he is survived by two children from his
wife’s previous marriage, Susan Morgenstern and Robert Morgenstern; and
five grandchildren.
Dr. Wallerstein argued that no world-system, to use his term, lasts
forever and that the current one, based on capitalism, is slowly
disintegrating.
For years he elaborated on these and other ideas in a series of
commentaries on his website, written on the first and 15th of each
month. On July 1 he announced that his posting that day was the 500th
and that it would be the last. He concluded it by pondering the future,
and whether and how the global change he predicted would come to pass.
“The world might go down further by-paths,” he wrote. “Or it may not. I
have indicated in the past that I thought the crucial struggle was a
class struggle, using class in a very broadly defined sense. What those
who will be alive in the future can do is to struggle with themselves so
this change may be a real one.
“I still think that,” he continued, “and therefore I think there is a
50-50 chance that we’ll make it to transformatory change, but only 50-50.”
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