(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2016)
(2016)
Special Issue - (2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2015)
(2015)
Special Issue - (2015)
(2015)
(2015)
(2015)
(2012)
(2012)
(2012)
Special Issue - (2012)
pp. 9586-9597 | Article Number: ijese.2016.680
Published Online: October 28, 2016
Abstract
The study is founded on the author’s comprehension of the methodological turn associated with the understanding of the future as social reality that is predetermined by social subjectness within the framework of creating the future in social practices of the creative class in Russian society. The authors of the study come to the conclusion that in order to investigate the future as social reality the frame of the structural analysis would be too narrow and would not reflect the focus on future in the life strategies of Russian citizens. The study develops theoretical and methodological construct which includes structure-activity and subject-activity aspects of the investigation of the future.
Keywords: Sociology of the Future, Social Subjectness, Social Thought, Methodological Approaches, Methodological Turn
References
Bourdieu, P. (2008) El oficio de sociólogo. Siglo XXI. 372 p.
Institutional practices and value policy in the sphere of interethnic relations. (2012). Rostov on Don. 350 p.
Kravchenko, S.A. (2015). Sociological knowledge through the prism of the “arrow of time”. Moscow. 137 p.
Lubskiy, A.V. (2015). Interdisciplinary scientific investigations: cognitive fashion or social challenge? Sociology, 10.
North, D.C., Wallis, J.J., Weingast, B.R. (2011). Violence and Social Orders. Moscow. 479 p.
Osipov, G.V. (2010). Introduction to sociological theoty. Moscow. 352 p.
Ritzer G. (2016). Essentials of Sociology.University of Maryland.688 p.
Volkov, Yu.G. (2011). Creativity: historic breakthrough of Russia. Moscow. 382 p.