Abstract

The concluding chapter critically reassesses the future of sociology and C. Wright Mills’ vision of the promise of the sociological imagination, and discusses Michael Burawoy’s call for ‘public sociology’, a more recent attempt to address sociology’s cultural relevance. As Mills’ original idea of the sociological imagination has become even something of a truism in latter-day sociology, to continue stimulating thought and provoking novel insights we need new concepts and a new sociological imagination. The chapter also maintains that it is only by imagining a different sociology that we can make sociology responsive to life in the 21st century and to understanding the world in which we live as both a human and a non-human world, marked by, say, computed sociality, ubiquitous waste and global climate change.

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