Peter
Stegmaier (Department of Science, Technology, and Policy Studies, University of
Twente) & Dirk vom Lehn (School of Management and Business, King's College London)
Thomas
Luckmann was born in 1927 in the Slovenian town of Jesenice, than soon after
became a part of the Yugoslavian Kingdom. Growing up bilingually at the Slovenian-Austrian
boarder he received a broad humanist education. After WWII, Luckmann moved to
Vienna where he first finished school and then studied linguistics and
philosophy. He later moved to Innsbruck to study psychology, egyptology, French
philology, and history. Right after marrying in 1950, first his wife Benita
Luckmann and then 1951 Thomas came to New York, destitute, where he first worked
as chauffeur for a known lawyer and as builder on his property, and his wife as
steno typist at the Wall Street, then continuing their studies in philosophy
and sociology at the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research.
Here, some of Luckmann’s teachers were Alfred Schütz, Karl Löwith, Carl Mayer
(through whom he later met Arnold Gehlen), and here as a student he met with Peter
L. Berger. In 1951, the young couple had a first of later three daughters (Maja,
Mara, Metka), attending lectures after five, in shifts, and learning during late
evening (Schnettler 2006).
After
completing his studies, Luckmann first taught at Hobart College, New York, before
returning to the New School for Social Research as successor of his teacher
Alfred Schütz, with Peter L. Berger as colleague, from 1962-3 as colleague and
friend also of Helmuth Plessner’s. In 1965 he returned to Germany where he
received a call to a chair at University of Frankfurt am Main. In 1970, Luckmann
became Professor for Sociology at University of Constance where he stayed until
his retirement in 1994.
The
richness and influence of Luckmann’s œuvre can be ascribed to its grounding in
a range of sociological, anthropological, and philosophical traditions with a
deep cultural-historical understanding. Luckmann combines the phenomenological
thinking of Edmund Husserl and Alfred Schütz, Karl Mannheim’s sociology of
knowledge and the anthropologies of Arnold Gehlen and Helmuth Plessner as well
as the American pragmatists George Herbert Mead, William James, and John Dewey,
and the later developing sociological perspectives of symbolic interactionism
and ethnomethodology.
Luckmann
probably best-known book is “The Social Construction of Reality—A Treatise in
the Sociology of Knowledge” (1966) that he wrote together with Peter L. Berger
… although, as he once put it, Luckmann and Berger actually wrote it
“four-headed”, “because we both discussed what we were doing with our wives,
who were scholars in their own right” (Dreher 2014). The influence of this book
is enormous, if not, in some areas, pervasive, yet hard to quantify. It has
been translated in many languages. Ideas and phrases (“the social construction
of …”) have been trivialised through more or less thoughtful use—often a sign
for impact far beyond narrow academic circles. Importantly, many authors have
build explicitly on it since it was first published half a century ago; nonetheless
many authors developed their own successful theoretical or empirical approaches
with less explicit reference to it, in continuation of or in demarcation from
it.
The
book can be read, although not directly meant as a fundamental critique of (structural)
functionalist reason. It also treats psychoanalysis with a little bit of irony.
At the core, it amalgamates the sociologies of Emil Durkheim with Max Weber in
the famous lead question: “How is it possible that human activity (Handeln) should produce a world of
things (choses)?” (Berger &
Luckmann 1966: 18). The ‘Social Construction’ provides a broad, not really
specific theory that can and has been used as a set of general heuristics for
grasping the historicity of what counts as real and relevant in a world shared
by fellow humans, full also of things and non-humans, mainly focussing on their
meaningful interactions. The book is deeply anthropological by recognising the
importance of the body and the organism, of social things and their histories.
Although often used as theoretical reference, it develops its great strengths
especially when empirically studying all kinds of specific interactions and
communications (in case of Luckmann himself: communicative genres as
institutionalised routines, moral communication in particular). Its charm and actuality
emerges from permanently urging the researcher to account both for the given
structures and the actually just occurring interactions that make the world to
what it is in that moment for those involved and later for those taking notice
of how it was so far seen as real and normal.
Of
enormous importance for the development of various contemporary discussions in
sociology is the book “The Structures of the Life-World” (1974) that Luckmann
developed from the notes and documents bequeathed unfinished by Alfred Schütz
after his premature death in 1959. The Structures of the Life-World” have
become a classic sociological text that provides the basis for sociological
phenomenology and recent developments in the sociology of knowledge. In the
book, Luckmann (and Schütz) unfold a theory to inform social theory, a
conception of how a person’s life-world is constituted by individually and
intersubjectively inhabiting a world of unquestioned everyday character.
A
particular interest of Luckmann’s research has always been the role of religion
in modern societies. Whilst Max Weber had highlighted the secularisation of
society, Luckmann showed already in the 1960s how religion features in modern
societies by virtue of a transformation of symbols. In 1967, he published the
book ‘The Invisible Religion’ with a very broad notion of religiosity that can
literally encompass everything, thereby allowing for discovering new or
different forms of religiosity, less or not at all associated with an
officially registered religious community. He distinguished small (within the
everyday), middle-range (only indirect), and great (far beyond everyday reality
reaching) transcendences. His theory of signs, symbols, and rituals is a
logical and fruitful further elaboration of his effort to trace transcendences
into all corners of social life. His analyses have provided the basis for the
emergence of discussions about “popular religion” and “intermediary
institutions”.
His
studies into genres in (oral) communication laid the foundation for the
emergence of the sociology of language and communication. In this area, his
best-known work explores the “Communicative Construction of Moral” (with Jörg
Bergmann, 1999). The recent emergence of “communicative constructivism”
(Knoblauch 2013) as a new strand of theory and research pays testimony to the
sustained impact of Luckmann’s work to the present day. Throughout his career
Luckmann published in multiple languages and taught in different parts of the
world making him a truly transcultural social theorist (Schnettler 2006). His
work therefore was received well not only in Europe but also elsewhere in the
world. Moreover, the influence of his work ripples through the social sciences
and reaches also into the information sciences (e.g. Martin et al. 2012: 1192; Luckmann
2005).
Luckmann
has questioned taken-for-granted assumptions about the equation of what is
social and is human. From cultural anthropology and history he follows that what
counts as social can be very different and changing. He always emphasised,
often with a dry sense of humour, that he would stand for a “realist” position,
especially when reminding so-called “constructivists” or “constructionists” of
how much the materiality of things matters and which manifold roles it can play
in the various social formations und dominating definitions of a ‘social world’
(Luckmann 1980). Scientific knowledge is seen in relation to everyday common
sense knowledge as special knowledge. Science, in his view, different than
religion, has failed to offer meaning to last questions because it is
falsifiable in principle, never able to claim ultimate truths and has therefore
run into its ‘cosmological fiasco’ of never having found the Archimedean point from
which both world and reality could be explained as well as this explanation
could be explained itself (Luckmann 1999, 1973).
Thomas
Luckmann remained active in German and international sociology and in conversation
with many neighbouring disciplines until very recently. On Tuesday, 10 May, he
has died after a long illness in his mountain home in Carinthia, Austria (not
far from the Slovenian boarder).
Sources
Berger, P. L., &
Luckmann, T. (1966). The social construction
of reality. A treatise in the sociology of knowledge. Garden City, New
York: Doubleday
Bergmann, J., &
Luckmann, T. (Eds.). (1999). Kommunikative Konstruktion von Moral. Band 1:
Struktur und Dynamik der Formen moralischer Kommunikation (Vol. 1) & Band
2: Von der Moral zu den Moralen (Vol. 2). Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag.
Dreher, Jochen
(2014): 50th Anniversary Social Construction Thomas Luckmann.
Sozialwissenschaftliches Archiv, Konstanz, at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=ObEsOZxslfE
Knoblauch, H. (2013). Communicative
constructivism and mediatization. Communication
Theory, 23(3), 297–315.
doi:10.1111/comt.12018
Luckmann, T. (2005). On the communicative construction of
reality. Lecture to the LSE Department of Information Systems 2nd February 2005
Luckmann,
T. (1999). Das kosmologische Fiasko der Soziologie. In R. Hitzler, J.
Reichertz, & N. Schröer (Eds.), Hermeneutische Wissenssoziologie.
Standpunkte zur Theorie der Interpretation (pp. 309-318). Konstanz: UVK
Luckmann,
T. (1980). Über die Grenzen der Sozialwelt Lebenswelt und Gesellschaft (pp.
56-92). Paderborn et al.: Schöningh
Luckmann,
T. (1973). Philosophy, Science and Everyday Life. In M. A. Natanson (Ed.),
Phenomenology and the Social Sciences Vol. 1 (pp. 143-185). Evanston/Ill.:
Northwestern UP
Luckmann, T. (1967). The invisible religion. New York:
MacMillan
Martin, B., Nightingale,
P., & Yegros-Yegros, A. (2012). Science and technology studies: Exploring
the knowledge base. Research Policy,
41, 1182-1204. doi:doi:10.1016/j.respol.2012.03.010
Pawlowski, T., &
Schmitz, H. W. (Eds.). (2003). 30 Jahre “Die gesellschaftliche Konstruktion der
Wirklichkeit”. Gespräch mit Thomas Luckmann. Essen: Shaker
Schnettler, B. (2006). Thomas Luckmann. Konstanz: UVK
One of the better appreciations of his work.
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