Journal | The Sociological Review |
---|
Date | Accepted/In press - 10 Aug 2016 |
---|
Date | E-pub ahead of print - 1 Feb 2017 |
---|
Date | Published (current) - 1 Sep 2017 |
---|
Issue number | 3 |
---|
Volume | 65 |
---|
Number of pages | 15 |
---|
Pages (from-to) | 478-492 |
---|
Early online date | 1/02/17 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Sociologists and futurists have come to see that ‘fabrications’ of the future as entirely open to being remade in the present have become more difficult to sustain in a complex and contingent world. Rather, new and more nuanced conceptualizations of the future are required. To contribute to that task, I draw inspiration from Rittel and Webber’s 1973 paper in which they analyze social problems as ‘wicked problems’ to explore how sociologists have found the future to be difficult and tricky, both conceptually and empirically and have sought to overcome those difficulties through various analytical strategies. I discuss the onto-epistemological status of the future in sociology, tracing major shifts in theorizing of the future and suggest that what makes the future so wicked – so difficult and pernicious - is that it is an ‘entanglement of matter and meaning’. In doing so, I draw on insights from STS (science and technology studies) and other fields of inquiry to propose a new conceptual language in which to do the sociology of the future.