The odd couple: Margaret Archer, Anthony Giddens and British social theorybjos_

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The British Journal of Sociology 2010 The odd couple: Margaret Archer, Anthony Giddens and British social theorybjos_1288 253..260 Anthony King The morphogenetic approach In 1982, the British Journal of Sociology published an important article by Margaret Archer, Morphogenesis versus Structuration: on combining structure and action (2010 [l982]), which had an impact at the time and remains widely cited to this day. It was also Archer s first statement of what would become her major contribution to social theory. The article was the germ from which three monographs (Culture and Agency (1988), Reality Social Theory (1995) and Being Human (2000)) playfully entitled The Archers by her readers, developed. In those works, she laid out what she initially described as her morphogenetic approach but later, under the influence of Roy Bhaskar, re-named as critical realism. Reading the article again in 2009, its continued prominence is obvious. Towards the end of the 1970s, Anthony Giddens had established himself as a major figure in British sociology. Decisively, he introduced strands of continental philosophy into British sociology and by the early 1980s had developed a distinctive theoretical approach, structuration theory. While sociology remains indebted to Giddens for his Europeanization of the discipline, structuration theory raised many problems. Structuration theory sought to unite functionalist and interactive traditions in a single theoretical framework which would explain social reproduction without derogating the lay actor (Giddens 1979: 71). To that end, Giddens proposed three fundamental concepts; system, structure and structuration. For Giddens, the social system, as an institutional reality is reproduced or changed in coherent ways because individual action is always already patterned by structure ; a virtual order of differences or rules. Accordingly, when individuals instantiate structure into practice, they simultaneously affirm not only the structure of rules but also the system itself; there is a duality of structure (Giddens 1984: 19). Structuration referred to the active process by which individuals, informed by (virtual) structure, acted in King (Department of Sociology and Philosophy, University of Exeter) (Corresponding author email: a.c.king@exeter.ac.uk) London School of Economics and Political Science 2010 ISSN 0007-1315 print/1468-4446 online. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA on behalf of the LSE. DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2009.01288.x

254 Anthony King the world to reproduce (or change) the social structures which confronted them. Archer s article was one of the first serious critiques of Giddens theoretical project; it remains one of the most insightful. Structuration theory was undoubtedly clever and intricate but Archer noted a profound problem at its very core.the concept of structure as a virtual order of difference was central to Giddens approach. Archer was, like many critics, rightly sceptical about the status and function of this virtual structure but, even bracketing these concerns, she noted that the concept involved troubling theoretical implications. Decisively, through the concept of structure, Giddens conflated the human agent with the system. Through structure, individual agency was constituted by the system: Ideally what he wants to integrate is the way in which the active creation of social conditions is itself unavoidably conditioned by needing to draw upon structural factors in the process (Archer 2010 [1982]: 229 [459]). Thus, Giddens commits himself to an enormous coherence of the structural properties, such that actors inescapable use of them embroils everyone in the stable reproduction of social systems (Archer 2010 [1982]: 230 [460]). For Archer, Giddens over-socializes 1 agents who have thoroughly interiorized their social conditions. On Archer s morphogenetic approach, such a conflation is fundamentally wrong for one of the principles of this approach is the distinctive properties of social structure and human agency have distinctive purposes. Indeed Archer wants to develop the distinction between the two in order to explore their interaction (Archer 1996). Archer also insightfully recognized a contradication at the heart of structuration theory. Since conditions are no more than internalised rules, an individual is free at any point to follow the rules differently: the individual could have acted otherwise (Giddens 1976: 75). For Archer, the implication of voluntarism is objectionable: the systematic underplaying of constraints artificially inflates the degrees of freedom for action (Archer 2010 [1982]: 234 [464]). The result of Giddens assertions of individual freedom is a curious and unresolved oscillation between determinism and voluntarism in Giddens work because he fails to maintain a distinction between the individual and social reality. Archer s criticisms were insightful in 1982 and many scholars have subsequently noted the conceptual dubiousness of the concept of structure (and its duality with the system). Connecting either explicitly or implicitly with Archer s comments, they have also stressed the unresolved voluntarism determinism dyad in Giddens work (Pleasants 1997, 1999; King 2004; Mestrovic 1998). Giddens seems committed to both a form of sociological determinism and to the assertion of individual agency at the same time. Archer s article stands as an important intervention into the debate. The article is also more than a little ironic, however. Although, as Archer demonstrated, Giddens concept of structure is deeply problematic, with its presumption that somehow the system distilled itself into a set of virtual repertoires, the fundamental contours of structuration theory were always London School of Economics and Political Science 2010 British Journal of Sociology

The odd couple 255 close to morphogenesis. Giddens did not ignore the institutional realities of the social system. He did not deny the existence of social conditions which transcended the individual. On the contrary, with the concept of the system, these realities were always present in his theory; society is not the creation of individual subjects (Giddens 1984: xl). Rather, he wanted to explain how this vast institutional complex was reproduced by the individual, without reducing the agency of the human subject, as the functionalist tradition had been accused of doing. Giddens structuration theory worked around two poles, as did morphogenesis; system or structure and agency. Archer rejected Giddens mediation of structure and agency, not his fundamental social ontology. It is not difficult to align morphogenetic social theory and structuration theory. Both theories imply three moments of social reproduction; the system, structure, structuration for Giddens or structural conditioning, social interaction and structural elaboration for Archer. For both Giddens and Archer, social structure, irreducible to the individual, was reproduced and changed by conditioned individual action. This underlying connection between Archer and Giddens became increasingly clear in the 1990s as Archer came under the influence of Roy Bhaskar. Although Archer has not recognized the point, as Bhaskar developed his critical realism, he explicitly pointed up the parallels between his own Transformation Model of Social Action and structuration theory (Bhaskar 1979). By aligning herself with Bhaskar (Archer 1995), she also unwittingly signalled a rapprochement with Giddens. In this, Archer was part of a much wider theoretical consensus which was then emerging and was manifest in the works of a wider range of scholars at the time. The ontology of structure and agency is evident in Habermas theory of communicative action, Foucault s archaeology, Bourdieu s concept of the habitus and, at certain points, Alexander s multidimensional sociology. In each case, social reality is investigated as a duality of structure and agency. Archer s BJS article was prominent in sociology at the time and her subsequent development of morphogenesis has remained a significant contribution to the discipline. It remains a reference point for sociologists who both support or reject the structure agency dichotomy. The paradigm of critical realism which Archer has played a major role in promoting has had even more impact, not only in sociology but across the disciplines. Since the 1980s, some international relations theorists have sought to overcome the neo-realist hegemony in that discipline through the development of constructivism. In contrast to the rationalist presumption of realism, constructivism, drawing on a version of sociology, maintained that states were, in fact, substantially influenced by norms; state policy was the normative product of states (and the elites which comprised them) understood their world. Alex Wendt (1999) has been a key figure here and he has specifically employed Giddens and his concept of structure and agency in his development of international relations theory British Journal of Sociology London School of Economics and Political Science 2010

256 Anthony King (Wendt 1987). More recently, a group of international relations scholars have explicitly identified themselves as critical realists and sought to analysis the international system and the actions of states within it in precisely the manner which Archer has advocated from 1982 (Wight 2006; Hay: 2002). They regard the international system as an irreducible emergent system which individual states reproduce and change through their at least partly autonomous action. The social theories of Archer and Giddens had unseen parallels at the time and those similarities continue today. One of Archer s major objections to structuration theory was its individualism. It seemed to conflate social reality and the individual. Giddens work in the 1990s seemed to confirm her point. After the publication of The Constitution of Society in 1984 and especially after 1987, Giddens interests, methods and prose changed dramatically. In place of the dense engagement with difficult theoretical literature to answer fundamental problems in social theory, Giddens lite appeared (Alexander 1996: 135). Giddens sought to examine individual and indeed possibly his own personal experience in late twentieth century modernity. Decisively, he released the individual from structural constraints: The self is seen as a reflexive project, for which individuals are responsible. We are, not what we are, but what we make of ourselves (Giddens 1995: 75). Archer s 1982 critique seems to have been vindicated. For Giddens, the social world did seem to revolve around the self. Ironically, however, just as Archer s morphogenetic approach of the 1980s unwittingly paralleled Gidden s structuration theory, so has her intellectual development since that time traversed a similar course to Giddens. In short, she moved from a structural orientation in the 1980s to a preoccupation with reflexive individual agency in the late 1990s and early 2000s. In her monographs on human agency (Archer 2000; 2003), Archer frames her analysis from two basic assumptions. She affirms the validity of the morphogenetic-realist ontology. Despite numerous criticisms, she reproduces her three-phase model of morphogenesis without revision to emphasize that the agent is always situated in an irreducible social context. Social reality exists independently of the individual. However, at the same time, she affirms not merely the existence of self-conscious human agency but its very dignity. She rejects the anti-humanist claims of many contemporary philosophers like Foucault, Baudrillard or Rorty that the self does not amount to much (Lyotard 1984). 2 As a social realist, I would seek to rescue social theory from both the postmodernists and their charitable humanistic defenders (Archer 2000: 21). For Archer, that rescue of social theory is synonymous with the rescue of the individual, although her individual is explicitly not the debased agent of Rational Choice Theory (Modernity s Man) or the cipher of social norms (Society s Being) (Archer 2000: 51 85, 86 117). In her later work, Archer maintains that in the first instance, practice is the central means by which the self is created; the self emerges, meaning someone with a sense of the self formed through London School of Economics and Political Science 2010 British Journal of Sociology

The odd couple 257 our embodied relations with the natural world (Archer 2000: 152). For Archer, practice is pivotal (Archer 2000: 184). Plausibly, she claims that what is central to human beings are not meanings, but doings (Archer 2000: 189). Of course, other animals are involved in doing as well. For Archer, humans are distinctive because implicit in their doings are conscious intention and, in the course of their activities from birth onwards, they begin to develop selfconsciousness; they become reflexive. As they engage in practice, humans develop emotions and a personal identity. This personal identity is not forced on them from outside, however. It is an emergent property of individual human action. Decisively, in this process of self-creation, humans are able to engage eventually in an internal conversation. As they develop a conscious I who acts and a self-conscious Me who experiences that action, it is possible for selves to consider the society around them, their place in and their actions. Selves are not simply the dupes of social groups, therefore; they are able to judge for themselves and adapt their perspectives and practices. Signally, Archer asserts that social identity is necessarily a sub-set of personal identity (Archer 2003: 120). For her, personal identity has a priority and authority over group identity. Significantly, precisely because personal identity the product of an internal reflexive conversation is independent of social circumstances, it is a vital to the transformation of society. Humans are fundamentally un-determined because whatever the social conditions in which they exist, they always possess the sanctuary of their personal identity. Archer s critical realism has become very Sartrean. Indeed, although its tone is very different, Archer s assertions about the status of the self are finally very close to Giddens. Like Giddens, she finally maintains that the individual is free. In Archer s later work as in Giddens writings, individuals are not what they are but what they make of themselves. The individual is able to choose their own destiny through an internal conversation. There is a strange loneliness in her sociology where the agent wanders as an isolated figure, engaged in a private conversation. This emptiness accentuates her closeness to Giddens. Even in his discussion of intimacy, his work is focused on the self. Interestingly, two experiences are identified by Archer as particularly important for the formation of the self; encounters with nature and with the divine (Archer 2004). As she discusses the experience of horseriding (Archer 2000: 163 4), one of her personal interests, the convergence with Giddens becomes even stronger. For both, the arena of reflexive self-expression is the sphere of leisure and consumption, not work and class. Archer sees herself as a fundamentally different kind of social theorist to Giddens but, in fact, there are many surprising parallels between them. It is a potentially unlikely intellectual pairing, especially given Archer s recurrent critique of structuration theory yet from the BJS article in 1982 to the present, Archer and Giddens have traversed a similar intellectual trajectory. From an original advocacy of ontological dualism, in which structural conditions British Journal of Sociology London School of Economics and Political Science 2010

258 Anthony King seemed to have been given the primary weight, they have moved to the other dimension and now prioritize the autonomous self. Archer s contribution to social theory nationally and internationally is irrefutable. As part of a critical realist programme and wider structure agency paradigm, she has played an important role in promoting British sociology internationally. Yet, current trends in social theory outside Britain might suggest that it may now be necessary to go beyond structure and agency and the framework which Archer has done so much to develop. A new consensus is apparent in sociology globally which no longer understands social reality in terms of structure and agency but in terms of networks. Instead of the closed systems so favoured by functionalist sociology in the middle of the twentieth century, many sociologists are now more interested in the open and indeterminate social webs which transcend national borders, precipitating particular kinds of activity at specific locations. These networks have emergent properties in the way which Archer has described; they are irreducible to their component individuals and must be understood as openended totalities. Decisively, the individual agent does not confront an already completed network. Rather, agents should be understood collectively as joint participants in the network, recurrently and mutually constituting themselves through their interactions. In Europe and America, this new network sociology is apparent in the work of a number of prominent scholars. Most obviously in Europe, Bruno Latour s Actor Network Theory explicitly seeks to understand any particular form of social practice not as the product of some determining background condition which is always already present (Latour 2005: 37). Rather, social reality is a dynamic and often quite contingent assemblages of very wide social networks (Latour 2005). For sociologists of associations, there exists no society to begin with, no reservoir of ties, no big reassuring pot of glue to keep all those ties together (Latour 2005: 37). Consequently, Latour radically claims that in order to have a complete list of people who are doing science, it is necessary not only to include everyone in the laboratory but also all institutions which support the active research; Shall we say that De Castro, the Ministry of Health, the Board of Directors, the President are all doing science? Certainly yes (Latour 1987: 158). Scientific research is influenced by all these agents and consequently, they are all ultimately involved in the production of science. Manuel Castells has explicitly forwarded a theory of social networks (Castells 1998). In America, a similar approach is observable. Although Randall Collins has not explored connections between his interaction ritual chain theory (2004) and Actor Network Theory, these parallels are particularly evident in his sociology of philosophy (2000). There he argues that intellectual innovation arises not out of individual genius but is collectively created in dense intellectual clusters, themselves located in networks spanning time and space. For these sociologists, the aim of the discipline is not to London School of Economics and Political Science 2010 British Journal of Sociology

demonstrate how structure is reproduced or changed by the individual agent. Rather they are concerned with demonstrating how distinctive forms of collective agency arise in particular milieus. With the structure and agency paradigm, Margaret Archer has helped establish British sociology internationally. To sustain the discipline globally, it may be necessary for British social theory to move forward from a dualistic to a network-centric ontology. The vertical paradigm of structure and agency dominant in the twentieth century might be usefully replaced by a horizontal perspective. In the twenty-first century, British sociologists might usefully think sideways. They could start to understand social reality not in terms of an individual confronting a pre-formed structure but in terms of multiple participants negotiating as they interact with and co-operate or struggle with each other.to this end, the next episode of the Archer s might be entitled Being Social: Collective Action and the Public Conversation. (Date accepted: September 2009) The odd couple 259 Notes 1. The concept is derived from Wrong (1964). 2. Cited along with other anti-humanists (Archer 2000: 19). Bibliography Alexander, J. 1996 Critical Reflections on Reflexive Modernization, Theory, Culture and Society 13(4): 133 8. Archer, M. 2010 [1982] Morphogenesis Versus Structuration: On Combining Structure and Action, The British Journal of Sociology The BJS: Shaping Sociology Over 60 Years: 225 52. [Originally published in 1982 British Journal of Sociology 33(4): 455 83.] Archer, M. 1988 Culture and Agency: The Place of Culture in Social Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Archer, M. 1995 Realist Social Theory: The Morphogenetic Approach, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Archer, M. 1996 Social Integration and System Integration: Developing the Distinction, Sociology 30(4): 679 99. British Journal of Sociology Archer, M. 2000 Being Human: The Problems of Agency, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Archer, M. 2003 Structure, Agency and the Internal Conversation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Archer, M. 2004 On Understanding Religious Experience: St Teresa as a Challenge to Social Theory in M. Archer, A. Collier and D. Porpora Transcendence: Critical Realism and God, London: Routledge. Bhaskar, R. 1979 The Possibility of Naturalism, Sussex: Harvester. Castells, M 1998 The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture. Vol 1. The Rise of Network Society, Oxford: Blackwell. Collins, R. 2000 The Sociology of Philosophies, London: Belknap Press. Collins, R. 2004 Interaction Ritual Chains, Princeton: Princeton University Press. London School of Economics and Political Science 2010

260 Anthony King Giddens, A. 1976 New Rules of Sociological Method, London: Hutchinson. Giddens, A. 1979 Central Problems in Social Theory, London: Macmillan. Giddens, A. 1984 The Constitution of Society, Cambridge: Polity. Giddens, A. 1995 Modernity and Self- Identity, Cambridge: Polity. Hay, C. 2002 Political Analysis, Basingstoke: Palgrave. King, A. 2004 The Structure of Social Theory, London: Routledge. Latour, Bruno 1987 Science in Action, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press. Latour, B. 2005 Re-assembling the Social, Oxford: Oxford University Press. Mestrovic, S. 1998 Anthony Giddens: The Last Modernist, London: Routledge. Lyotard, J.-F. 1984 The Postmodern Condition, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Pleasants, N. 1997 Free to Act Otherwise? A Wittgensteinian Deconstruction of the Concept of Agency in Contemporary Social and Political Theory, History of the Human Sciences 10(4): 1 28. Pleasants, N. 1999 Wittgenstein and the Idea of a Critical Social Theory, London: Routledge. Wendt, A. 1987 The Agency Structure Problem in International Relations Theory, International Organization 41(3). Wendt, A. 1999 Social Theory of International Relations, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Wight, C. 2006 Agents, Structures and International Relations: Politics as Ontology, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Wrong, D. 1964 The Oversocialized Conception of Man in Modern Sociology in L. Coser and B. Rosenberg (eds) Sociological Theory: A Book of Reading, London: Macmillan. London School of Economics and Political Science 2010 British Journal of Sociology