George E. McCarthy
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George E. McCarthy | |
|---|---|
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | New School for Social Research (sociology) |
| Thesis | Systems Theory and the Engineering of Utopia: Urban Technology and Planning in the Post-Industrial City (1979) |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | philosophy and sociology |
| Sub-discipline | nineteenth- and twentieth-century German social theory |
| Institutions | Kenyon College |
George E. McCarthy is a professor of sociology at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, United States.
- M.A., Ph.D. New School for Social Research (sociology) 1979
- M.A., Ph.D. Boston College (philosophy) 1972
- B.A. Manhattan College (philosophy) 1968[1]
Career
George E. McCarthy became National Endowment for the Humanities Distinguished Teaching Professor of Sociology in 2000. He has been a research fellow at the University of Frankfurt am Main, a guest professor at the Institute for Political Science at the University of Munich, and a Senior Fulbright Research Fellow in philosophy and sociology at the University of Kassel. He has received a Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD), Fulbright Research Fellowship, and an NEH Research Fellowship. McCarthy's courses at Kenyon College focus on ethics and social justice, political and social theory, philosophy and sociology of science, German social thought and Greek philosophy/literature, and American political economy. His major area of concentration is nineteenth- and twentieth-century German social theory: Karl Marx, Max Weber, Friedrich Nietzsche, Sigmund Freud, Martin Heidegger, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Max Horkheimer, Herbert Marcuse and Jürgen Habermas.