Karl Mannheim (March 27, 1893, Budapest - January 9, 1947, London) was a Hungarian-born sociologist, influential in the first half of the 20th century and one of the founding fathers of classical sociology. Mannheim rates as a founder of the sociology of knowledge.
He studied in Budapest, Berlin -- in 1914 he attended lectures by Georg Simmel --, Paris and Heidelberg. During the brief period of the Hungarian Soviet in 1919 he was offered a position by his friend and teacher Georg Lukács. After the collapse of the government Mannheim moved to Germany. From 1922 to 1925 in Heidelberg he worked under the German sociologist Alfred Weber, brother of the well-known sociologist Max Weber. Norbert Elias worked as one of his assistants (from spring 1930 until spring 1933). He held posts at Heidelberg, Frankfurt, the London School of Economics and the University of London.
Mannheim’s biography, one of intellectual and geographical migration, falls into three main phases: Hungarian (to 1919), German (1919-1933), British (1933-1947). Among important intellectual influences are Georg Lukács, Georg Simmel, Edmund Husserl, Karl Marx, Alfred and Max Weber, Max Scheler and Wilhelm Dilthey. Through these and others, German historicism, Marxism, phenomenology, sociology and Anglo-American pragmatism entered his work.
Mannheim's ambitious attempt to promote a comprehensive sociological analysis of the structures of knowledge was treated with suspicion by Marxists and neo-Marxists of the Frankfurt School. They saw the rising popularity of the sociology of knowledge as a neutralization and a betrayal of Marxist inspiration. During his few years in Frankfurt prior to 1933 the rivalry between the two intellectual groupings - Mannheim's seminar (with Norbert Elias as his assistant) and that of Horkheimer and the Institute for Social Research - was intense.
In his British phase, Mannheim attempts a comprehensive analysis of the structure of modern society by way of democratic social planning and education.
Mannheims book Ideologie und Utopie (1929) was the most widely debated book by a living sociologist in Germany during the Weimar Republic; the English version Ideology and Utopia (1936) has been a standard in American-style international academic sociology. The quite different German and English versions of the book figure in reappraisals of Mannheim initiated by new textual discoveries and republications. Mannheim’s sociological theorizing has been the subject of numerous book-length studies, evidence of an international interest in his principal themes. Mannheim was not the author of any work he himself considered a finished book, but rather of some fifty major essays and treatises, most later published in book form.
1893 births | 1947 deaths | Hungarian sociologists | Academics of the London School of Economics
Karl Mannheim | Karl Mannheim | Karl Mannheim | קרל מאנהיים | Mannheim Károly | カール・マンハイム | Karl Mannheim | Маннгейм, Карл
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