
New Books in Intellectual History Thomas Kemple, “Intellectual Work and the Spirit of Capitalism: Weber’s Calling” (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014)
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Aug 16, 2025 Thomas Kemple, a Sociology professor at UBC, discusses his book on Max Weber's interplay of style and substance. He delves into Weber's unique literary structure and how it enriches sociological understanding. Kemple also examines the personal influences on Weber, particularly from his wife Marianne, adding depth to the theorist's legacy. The conversation touches on the relevance of literary insights and artistic expressions in exploring ethical dilemmas in modernity and the dynamics of entrepreneurial identity in capitalism.
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Lectures As Situated Speech Acts
- Kemple frames Weber's public lectures as deliberate speech acts that shape audience understanding.
- Reading these texts as situated performances changes interpretation of Weber's claims about science and politics.
Verstehen And Value Freedom Recast
- Kemple reframes Weber's Verstehen (understanding) as interactive, oral, and textual rather than abstract neutrality.
- He clarifies Wertfreiheit (value freedom) as an open comparative stance, not mere scholarly neutrality.
Faust Quotations As Sociological Allegory
- Kemple reads Weber's recurring citation of Goethe's Faust as a sociological allegory and performative ventriloquism.
- Quoting Mephistopheles lets Weber voice value positions indirectly to younger audiences.









