Thomas Luckmann
Born
Tomaž Luckmann

14 October 1927
Died10 May 2016
SpouseBenita Petkevic (m. 1950; died 1987)
Children3 daughters: Maja, Mara, and Metka
Academic background
EducationUniversity of Vienna and University of Innsbruck
Alma materThe New School for Social Research
InfluencesAlfred Schütz, Carl Mayer
Academic work
DisciplineSociology, Philosophy
Sub-disciplinePhenomenology, sociology of knowledge, sociology of religion
InstitutionsUniversity of Konstanz, The New School for Social Research
Main interestsLinguistics, history, and philosophy
Notable worksThe Social Construction of Reality (1966), The Invisible Religion (1967), "The sociology of Language"(1975), The Structures of the Life-World with Alfred Schütz (1982), and "Life-World and Social Realities" (1983)

Thomas Luckmann (/ˈlʌkmən/; October 14, 1927 – May 10, 2016) was an American-Austrian sociologist of German and Slovene origin who taught mainly in Germany. Born in Jesenice, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, Luckmann studied philosophy and linguistics at the University of Vienna and the University of Innsbruck. He married Benita Petkevic in 1950. His contributions were central to studies in sociology of communication, sociology of knowledge, sociology of religion, and the philosophy of science. His best-known titles are the 1966 book, The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge (co-authored with Peter L. Berger), The Invisible Religion (1967), and The Structures of the Life-World (1973) (co-authored with Alfred Schütz)

Overview

Early life

Luckmann was born in 1927 in Jesenice, Slovenia which at the time was part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. He had an Austrian father who was an industrialist, his mother was from a Slovene family from Ljubljana.[1] On his mother's side, he was the cousin of the Slovene poet Božo Vodušek. As a kid he was expose to two vastly different cultures, and Luckmann had the advantage of growing up in a bilingual environment[2] speaking both Slovene and German. He attended Slovene-language schools while in Jesenice until the year 1941, when the occupation of Slovenia during World War II forced him to transfer to Klagenfurt high school in Austria. Later in 1943 he and his mother relocated to Vienna, after the death of his father and several other relatives during World War II.[2] Living in Austria during this period automatically granted him German citizenship, and in 1944 he was drafted for the army,[3] joining the Luftwaffe where he served as a Luftwaffenhelfer.[4] Luckmann was transferred to a military hosipital for minor injuries shortly before the end of the war.[5] Luckmann was in the hospital in Bavaria when the United States liberated the region. After liberation, in 1945 Luckmann became a prisoner of war and escaped after three months. He then settled back to Vienna[3] and graduated from "Notmatura."

Education Background

Luckmann attended high school in Klagenfurt, after he and his family fled Italian occupation in Ljubljana in 1941. After escaping being a prisoner of war, Luckmann began studying philosophy and linguistics at the University of Vienna and Innsbruck.[3] He then went on and graduated from Notmatura, and from 1948 and on he began studying different subjects in the social science field. He then moved to the United States with his wife, Benita Petkevic, where he then studied at The New School in New York City.[1]

The Social Construction of Reality

It was his time at The New College, did Luckmann begin to discern his career as a sociologist. He was taught by Alfred Scütz, Dorion Cairns, Albert Salomon, and Carl Meyer, they later became great influence on Luckmann. This was when he was first introduced to the sociological discipline, and then he got familiarized with Alfred Schütz’s work on sociological phenomenology. He went on to meet Peter Berger, where he would later go on to co-author The Social Construction of Reality, which later ended up becoming one of his most notable works. Together, he and his colleagues produced some of the most influential sociological works of the 20th century.

Luckmann never intended to become a sociologist. His initial academic interests resided in linguistics, history and philosophy. At The New School, Luckmann primarily studied philosophy and chose to study sociology as a second subject after admiring how his teachers specialized in these dual subjects.[6] For example, Luckmann was introduced to the sociology of religion when his teacher at the time, Carl Meyer, asked him to do field work about churches in Germany after World War II. Captivated by his experience in Germany, Luckmann used his fieldwork to pursue a Ph.D in sociology.[7] He obtained his first academic position at Hobart College, in Geneva, New York, before returning to teach at The New School after the death of Alfred Schütz. Luckmann was eventually granted a professorship position at The University of Frankfurt in 1965. After publishing two books in 1963 and 1966, and several successful essays, Luckmann worked as a professor of Sociology at the University of Konstanz in Germany from 1970 to his retirement,[8] and later professor emeritus.[9] It is noted that his time in at Konstanz was marked as an intense period of interdisciplinary work, in which he wrote multiple essays concerning communication, linguistics, literature and history.

Life Events

In 1950, Luckmann married Benita Petkevic, who was a Lativan-born social scientist who taught in Austria, Germany. It was said that their marriage was a turning point for his life, among many other factors. The couple had three daughters Maja, Mara, and Metka.[2] On May 10, 2016, Luckmann died of cancer at the age of 88 at his home in Austria.[3]

Legacy

Luckmann's ideas and theories have been influential within the field in sociology and has had a huge impact on the world and intellectual thought.

50th Anniversary Social Construction Thomas Luckmann.

Works

Early Work

Luckmann worked as a chauffeur and his, Benita, worked as a typist when they first moved to New York. During this time, he continued studying sociology and philosophy at the New School for Research. It was there where he first met some of the great influences of his life, including Peter L. Berger.[10]

Concepts

Philosophy and Social Thought

Luckmann was a follower of the phenomenologically oriented school of sociology, established by the Austrian American scholar Alfred Schütz. He contributed to the foundation of phenomenological sociology, the sociology of religion in modern societies, and the sociology of knowledge and communication.[3] The interdisciplinary nature of his work remains relevant in sociology and other disciplines today.[11]

Social Constructionism

Social Constructionism focuses on the study of the process of social construction. It could be described as an "approach" that is neither a theory of religion or any other social phenomenon.[12] In several of his works, he developed the theory of social constructionism, which argues that all knowledge, including the most basic common-sense knowledge of everyday reality, which included gender, ethnicity, nations, and religion. It's derived from and maintained by social interactions especially through language. Together with Peter L. Berger, he wrote the book The Social Construction of Reality, and it was published by 1966. The book was an important part of the move in sociology as it established "social construction" as part of sociological vocabulary. It was also particularly with the sociology of religion, away from the view of religion and religious values as central to the social order, arguing that social order is socially constructed by individuals and/or groups of individuals.[13] Since publication, the book has been translated into thirteen different languages and serves as a cornerstone in sociological literature.[7] Berger wrote on their experience writing the book saying "someone asked, Why did not The Social Construction of Reality immediately have a huge effect? The effect came much later, and my answer was that you cannot play chamber music at a rock concert. And compared to what was going on all around us in the social sciences, we were doing chamber music."[14]

Sociology of Religion

Following his field work in Germany and the completion of his dissertation, Luckmann was asked to complete several reviews on the surrounding sociological literature concerning religion. Disappointed by the positivistic, unauthentic views of a Church-backed sociology of religion, Luckmann was compelled to write The Invisible Religion in 1963.[7] The book was then translated into English in 1967. Luckmann proposes that there are four derivative types of religion the first of those being a "is a universal and nonspecific elementary social form which is an objective total worldview providing social meaning for a society's existence."[15] The second, "the specific institutional social form of religion constituted by configurations of religious representations form- ing a sacred cosmos which is part of the worldview."[15] The third, "a universal nonspecific form of individual religiosity which is an internalized subjective system of relevance reflecting the objectivated universal and nonspecific elementary social form of religion."[15] Lastly, "a specific biographical form of religiosity in individual consciousness."[15] Drawing from Durkheim, Luckmann developed a functional perspective in his theoretical objectives. Luckmann's theory reiterate's Durkheim's notion that "the original symbol system whereby man emerged from the animal world was religious."[15] Rather than reverting to popular explanations of secularization, Luckmann explained the emergence of a new kind of religion in the 20th century: private religion[9] He explains the diffusion of world views and institutional de-specialization of religion led to a privatization, rather than a retreat, from religion.[6] Though Luckmann initially received harsh criticisms, The Invisible Religion became a pivotal move within the sociology of religion in the 20th century, especially in conjunction with The Social Construction of Reality.

Sociology of Knowledge and Communication

Luckmann’s contribution to the sociology of knowledge and communication is based on his careful analysis of the link between socio-cultural linguistic practices, and the construction of social reality.[6] His sociology of knowledge provides a theoretical, framework that allows the sociology of knowledge approach to discourse.[16] Based on his empirical research of conversational analysis, Luckmann explains his theory of “communicative genres” in which linguistic types, such as, gossip, proverbs, or jokes, all serve as forms of social knowledge, and act as tools for the formation of social structure.[6] He offers a comprehensive view on society as symbolic order and ordering, including levels and actors' agencies, and the interplay between both.[16] There's an emphasis the role of language and the daily "conversation machinery" for the construction of the shared social reality.[16] His ethnography of speaking, modeled a social interactional code that gave a dissimilar approach to sources of social constraint.[6]

Social Action

Luckmann continued this analysis of social action, and in 1982 he continued the work of Alfred Schütz, drawing on Schütz's notes and unfinished manuscripts to complete Structures of the Life-World, published (posthumously for Schütz) in 1982.[3] Luckmann then built upon Schütz's analysis and published, Theory of Social Action in 1992.[3]

Together with Richard Grathoff and Walter M. Sprondel, Luckmann founded the Social Science Archive Konstanz (also known as the Alfred Schütz Memorial Archives).[3] What became the official archive of the German Sociological Association, Luckmann and his colleagues gathered research accounts of German social science.[6]

In 1998 he was awarded an honorary doctorate from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).[17]

In 2004 Luckmann became an honorary member of the Slovenian Sociological Association.[8] The German Sociological Association awarded him a prize for his outstanding lifetime contribution to sociology at its 2002 Congress, and Luckmann became an honorary member in 2016.[3]

The original Thomas Luckmann Papers are deposited in the Social Science Archive Konstanz.

Essential bibliography

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Novotný, Lukáš (2016). "Sociální a komunikativní konstrukce reality – vzpomínka na Thomase Luckmanna" [Social and communicative construction of reality - memory of Thomas Luckmann]. Sociologický časopis (in Czech). 52 (4): 581–589. JSTOR 43920836. ProQuest 1836869345.
  2. 1 2 3 "Nachrichten und Mitteilungen". KZFSS Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie. 68 (4): 757–767. December 2016. doi:10.1007/s11577-016-0396-z. S2CID 189793824.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Endreß, Martin (November 2016). "Thomas Luckmann (October 14, 1927–May 10, 2016)". Human Studies. 39 (4): 487–491. doi:10.1007/s10746-016-9416-2. S2CID 151719771.
  4. Thomas Luckmann: „Teilweise zufällig, teilweise, weil es doch Spaß macht“. In: Monika Wohlrab-Sahr (Hrsg.): Kultusoziologie: Paradigmen – Methoden – Fragestellungen. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, Wiesbaden 2010, p. 88.
  5. doi:10.1177/0037768608097237. Accessed 20 Oct. 2021.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Estruch, Joan (December 2008). "A Conversation with Thomas Luckmann". Social Compass. 55 (4): 532–540. doi:10.1177/0037768608097237. S2CID 144043334.
  7. 1 2 3 Dreher, Jochen; Göttlich, Andreas (March 2016). "Structures of a Life-Work: A Reconstruction of the Oeuvre of Thomas Luckmann". Human Studies. 39 (1): 27–49. doi:10.1007/s10746-016-9392-6. S2CID 147459455.
  8. 1 2 Adam, F; Čas, B (2004). "Utemeljitev za imenovanje dr. Tomaža Luckmanna, profesorja emeritusa, za častnega člana Slovenskega sociološkega društva". Druzboslovne Razprave (in Slovenian). 20: 87–89.
  9. 1 2 "In memoriam Thomas Luckmann (14. Oktober 1927 - 10. Mai 2016)". Soziologie (in German). 45: 335–341. 2016.
  10. Stegmaier, Peter & vom Lehn, Dirk. (2016). Thomas Luckmann dies aged 88. 10.13140/RG.2.1.4175.5762.
  11. Sica, Alan (March 2016). "Social Construction as Fantasy: Reconsidering Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann's The Social Construction of Reality after 50 Years". Cultural Sociology. 10 (1): 37–52. doi:10.1177/1749975515614869. S2CID 147527965.
  12. Possamai, Adam; Blasi, Anthony J. (2020). Social Constructivism. 2455 Teller Road, Thousand Oaks, California 91320: SAGE Publications, Inc. hdl:10138/326394.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  13. Encyclopedia of global religion. Juergensmeyer, Mark., Roof, Wade Clark. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications. 2012. ISBN 9781452266565. OCLC 767737455.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  14. Vera, H. (2016). An Interview with Peter L. Berger: Chamber Music at a Rock Concert. Cultural Sociology, 10(1), 21–29. https://doi-org.holycross.idm.oclc.org/10.1177/1749975515616825
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 Weigert, Andrew J. (1974). "Whose Invisible Religion? Luckmann Revisited". Sociological Analysis. 35 (3): 181–188. doi:10.2307/3710648. JSTOR 3710648.
  16. 1 2 3 Keller, Reiner (2012-08-30). "Entering Discourses: A New Agenda for Qualitative Research and Sociology of Knowledge". Qualitative Sociology Review. 8 (2): 46–75. doi:10.18778/1733-8077.8.2.04. ISSN 1733-8077. S2CID 141850561.
  17. "Honorary Doctors". www.ntnu.edu. Retrieved 2018-08-30.

Further reading

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