Last time out, I offered the beginning of a response to Dorothy Ross’s two-part article in Modern Intellectual History, “Whatever Happened to the Social in American Social Thought?” (Part 1, Part 2 of the article) As a quick recap, Ross’s article takes aim at what she identifies as a standard periodization—articulated most elaborately by Daniel Rodgers’s
Dorothy Ross and the Totalitarian Fear
Dorothy Ross and the Totalitarian Fear
Dorothy Ross and the Totalitarian Fear
Last time out, I offered the beginning of a response to Dorothy Ross’s two-part article in Modern Intellectual History, “Whatever Happened to the Social in American Social Thought?” (Part 1, Part 2 of the article) As a quick recap, Ross’s article takes aim at what she identifies as a standard periodization—articulated most elaborately by Daniel Rodgers’s