Monday, January 23, 2017

Sociologist Spotlight: C. Wright Mills





INTRODUCTION

Every Sociologist has an origin story; a tale of how they got to be where they are, and when they first were introduced to Sociology itself. Then, enthralled in its passion for the revelatory understanding of human beings and group behavior, decide (economically unwisely in many cases) to become Sociologists. Much of this origin story is steered by mentors and their perception of society. The mentor’s perception of society lays the foundation for their student’s “Sociological awakening”.  A person can easily zero in on the perception of a Sociologist by asking about Sociological Theory.
            In Sociology, at the undergraduate level, where “the passion” for sociology often gets ignited, students learn about the Three Main Sociological Theoretical Perspectives[1] From those three perspectives students also learn about the “Holy Trinity” of Sociologists (Namely Emile Durkheim, Max Weber and Karl Marx). Usually, one can trace back any and all Sociologist, and Sociological Thought back to these three principles and the work of Marx, Weber and Durkheim. Thus, for many of us contemporary Sociologists, our perception of society can be traced back through all of our theoretical parents and grandparents to (usually) one of these three men.
Unfortunately, this brings to mind the sobering reality that most of  Classical Social Theory has a “Dead White Dude” problem[2]. This problem born out of colonialism/ imperialism, dehumanization and genocide results in the elevation of the written work of upper class, heterosexual white men to be considered classical, or important to the discipline to the point that historically, people have been able to get a Sociology degree (not to mention others) without reading the work of both people of color or women. It is a problem that still stays with us today and is something that all Sociology professors today should take part in correcting.[3]
When a sociologist often completes a genealogy of their theoretical ancestry, they are liable to come across” forks” and “broken lines”. Some theorist you enjoy, combine ideas of other theorist in an attempt to advance and coalesce similar or divergent ideas (which become your forks), while other theorists you only embrace them on one singular idea or explanation of social behavior. (broken lines). For example: a sociologist may like Robert Merton because he synthesizes ideas from Durkheim and Comte (fork) but you may only like Georg Simmel for his views on the Sociology of Religion (broken line).
My theoretical genealogy, from the very beginning, was full of radicals, revolutionaries and cultural critics of society. From the inception point of Sociology into my young mind, I was on the road to being the Post-Structure Critical Sociologist that I am today. Individuals that were integral in that process were Karl Marx (for understanding Conflict), Max Weber (for understanding Structures) and (more contemporarily) Michel Foucault, Adrianne Rich and Gayle Rubin (for understanding Sexuality and Relational Power Dynamics), Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Audre Lorde and Patricia Hill Collins (for understandings of Race), Judith Butler, Judith Lorber and Candace West ( for understanding gender)  Zigmunt Bauman[4] (for his notion of Liquidity)  all of whom have been well established and analyzed by individuals smarter and with a higher pedigree in Sociology than I. Yet, there is one Sociologist whose work, personality and perspective is vital to my understanding of society, and whom (comparably) little has been written about…which is the work of C. Wright Mills.



BRIEF BACKGROUND

            Compared to many of the other theorists mentioned above, little has been written about C. Wright Mills biography, especially his early life[5] Born on August 28th 1916 in Waco Texas, Mills had a pretty substantial middle class background (his father’s middle class white collar job would impact Mills’ perception on social class later on) he grew up in the company of many women, at a time when the gender binary was aggressively reproduced in all interactions and institutions, Mills often felt “lonely”(Kerr 2009: 25).    Growing up without a lot of male role models, Mills idolized his maternal grandfather. An intellectual and radical in his own right, Mills became a chip off the old block that embodied the masculinity of the stereotypical Texas cowboy of the time.
 Belligerent and uncompromising in his attitudes especially of his disdain for the system and the general status quo of institutions and the broader society, Mills at every turn attempted to buck the system beyond simple ideology. In his freshman year of military school, Mills penned a letter that challenged the hierarchical structure of the cadets; promoting a more egalitarian model (Kerr 2009).  In that letter, at such a young age, Mills resisted and challenged any type of social control that was created by force, and believed that criticism of society was the highest form of patriotism[6]  Mills seemed to embody that criticism later in his adult and professional career, through both his dress (refusing to wear the standard suit and tie, electing instead to wear soiled boots and motorcycle chaps) and demeanor (becoming increasingly combative with his colleagues[7]) solidifying himself as an outsider. By the time he became a professor at Columbia University he quickly not only became an outcast, but a pariah. 
Embodying the personification of the “Radical Cowboy” cost Mills as much as it mythologized him. For every story of his whimsical eccentricities[8] there were stories about the price he had to pay for being a systemic contrarian.  Mills became such an unwanted entity at Columbia that he wasn’t assigned any graduate-level classes[9].  This greatly affected Mills’ legacy and is the chief reason why many sociologists only know a fraction of his work. By not teaching any graduate-level courses, Mills’ ideas and influence over the student body at Columbia was minimized. Whether this was deliberate or not has yet to be confirmed[10]. What is known is that this greatly reduced the likelihood that he would be able to pass on his ideas directly to a group of students, effectively isolating Mills, and solidifying his reclusiveness. Because he had no grad students that he could mentor and mold into a revolutionary sociological army, there is no “Millsian” School of Sociology as there is with other sociologists (Such as Marx, Weber and Durkheim) which has caused a lot of Mills work to go unread (the notable exception being the first chapter of his most famous book[11]).  C. Wright Mills died on March 20th 1962 from a fourth and subsequently fatal heart attack.
There are several contributing factors to C. Wright Mills’ limited notoriety in addition to his lack of disciples/acolytes. Firstly, Mills died young at the age of 45 in 1962. Which means that his early death compromised the breadth of knowledge he could have provided over the span of an average lifetime. Secondly, as of this writing Mills has been dead for over half a century. In that time, a lot of his work has either ceased to be published (Listen Yankee! and New Men of Power, or difficult to come by (The Causes of World War III and The Marxist). In fact, the latest editions of his most famous books still in print were last published in 2000.[12] Therefore, with the inevitable passage of time, and a lack of a true comprehensive understanding of Mills’ work, many contemporary sociologist (plausibly) believe that many if not most of Mills’ ideas are often unrelatable or are out of touch with the current analysis of society today[13]. While I concede that Mills’ does have weakness in his overall scope of society (mostly by omission, rather than false claims), in order to understand our changing multi-variant world, and produce a population of aggressive and allied activists, we need the work of C. Wright Mills.



THEMES AND KEY IDEAS

Mills as a theorist and a critical sociologist, was a “fork” for me between Weber and Marx.  He had the revolutionary flavor and deconstructive spirit of Marx, while having an understanding of the inner workings of the system (and how it tries to resist change) from Weber.  With these influences, in these proper proportions, he was uniquely posed to be the cultural critical of his generation. He was able to understand the failing system, but also how it worked so he could promote change from both ends, outside the establishment, (which can be epitomized in his book Listen Yankee!) or within it (through his college teaching). It is my contention that Mills was writing in the wrong decade. If much of his work was published in the late sixties through the seventies I believe that the general public would have had a powerful response to Mills ideas. Mills was, when he was alive, the intellectual that we that we deserved, but not the one we needed in the 1950’s. Now, a half century after his death his themes and ideas still have relevance and speak truth.

            Biography and History

“Neither the life of an individual, or the history of a society can be understood without understanding both.”-C. Wright Mills

The concepts of biography and history are chiefly speaking about the relationship between the individual and larger social groups.  Sociology has been grappling with this issue of the persons versus groups of people since its inception.  In a thinly veiled attempt to seem novel, this idea has been written about and discussed under many pseudonyms. Whether that is the general idea of Micro Sociology and Macro Sociology, or something more esoteric like “agency and “structure”, the relationship between the individual and some type of group organization (whether it be formulated by an authority or not) has always been central to the study of society; and therefore Sociology.   What Mills emphasizes with his notion of biography and history is the interconnected nature of the individual with the group. He isn’t so prosaic to say that a group is nothing more than a bunch of individuals (since all Sociologists worth their degree understand that the group often behaves in ways separate individuals never would on their own), instead he discusses how this symbiotic relationship can move us out of complacent attitudes we often find ourselves in.
            For Mills, the ideas of biography and history and the understanding of both, that allows one to embrace and utilize The Sociological Imagination (his word for what has come to be known as “the sociological perspective”) which is one’s ability to look at the world beyond the individual and see the world as an interconnected web. The choices an individual makes, is not outside of society, in a social vacuum. Instead, choices are made within a very specific set of social circumstances and context. Essentially, the relationship between biography and history is complex and interwoven to the point where neither one is independent.  This understanding can motivate for people into action, whatever that action might be. This is because, through an understanding of the relationship between biography and history, a person can understand that they are not isolated from the world, in fact they are very much a part of it; and therefore can create change.      
              
Power, Knowledge, and the Elite

            Mills’ ideas of power began with his adoption of its Weberian definition (paraphrased): Power is the ability to realize your will even when others resist. He expanded Weber’s idea to state that Power itself was localized in particular social institutions, namely: The government, politics and the economy.
Using a Power/Conflict perspective, these powerful social institutions have access or can gain access (usually by physical force) to natural and social resources resulting in their ability to shape the socio-political structure to their will.                                                 




  The “They” Mills speaks of is “The Power Elite” a small group of individuals that operate within high positions of the powerful social institutions.  It is through their positions (not necessarily themselves) that these “elite” wield power, and from them gain prestige (status), prosperity (wealth) and persuasion (influences).  They are often a collusive and intimate circle that isolates themselves from the general public.  If and when people speak of The Power Elite these are often names that you do not know or at most only vaguely heard of.  They are not celebrities, they are the visibly invisible. All of their actions are transparent and can be contentious but are far removed from the general public. It’s this collective’s decisions, or indecisions that shape society itself. This is the 1% of the 1%. Examples would be:   Joint chiefs, Congressional Committee members, C.E.O.s, Military Leaders, Think Tanks etc.
After “The Elite” Mills identifies “The Middle levels of Power”.  These are individuals who are often employed by the Power Elite to act as regulators of and distractions for the non-powerful.  For Mills, an example of the former would be the white collar workers of middle management. They may have money and a slight amount of influence over the everyday relationships within the microcosm of their job, but it is the influence afforded to them by The Power Elite.  An example of the latter, for Mills, would be Celebrities and other public personalities whose job it is to distract the non-powerful away from the actions and decisions of the powerful. Entertainment and trivialities are often used to achieve this end.   In both cases, they are the instrument of the higher authority; the mechanism by which The Power Elite exercise their power.  The Enforcers of the structural organization.
Finally, Mills identifies “The Mass Society” which is basically everyone else within the social structure.  These are the non-powerful everyday individuals whose trajectory of their daily lives is out of their control. The public is constantly being alienated from that which gives them agency (free non-coerced choice) usually, through the elements of the middle levels of power. An example of this alienation for Mills is indirect representation in decision making (i.e. our democratic republic) This is all meant to limit popular participation in the decision making process. As a result, the decisions of the powerful are less debated because the “Mass society” are maintained to be ignorant, politically ambivalent lemmings whom are disoriented by personal anxieties stemming from their manufactured trap of false consciousness within their own private orbits.
            This structure, in its control, effects the knowledge that is seen as important within our society. Mills sees that there are Men of Knowledge (those who are intellectuals and a part of the Intelligentsia) and Men of Power (Those with high positions of authority in the social institutions of Politics, the Military and the Government). Men of Knowledge are usually advisers or experts to the Men of Power.  They are “the hired men” of the powerful. Thus because of this subservience of “Knowledge” to “Power”, Power shapes Knowledge, leading to the assumption that The powerful are also the most knowledgeable. Think of the way in which we project intelligence upon our social and political leaders making the false assumption that the achievement of their high ranking social status was due to their smarts.  Ex: Political Candidates

 This makes Power into Knowledge and Knowledge an instrument of the powerful. The unfortunate result of which is the alienation of knowledge from the populace, culminating in the public's absent mindedness and fear of Knowledge as something untrustworthy. As an example think of less rigorous educational paradigms (No child left behind Common Core), Basic skills initiatives, the idea of students as customers, and experience as intelligence.
Mills solution is to create a knowledgeable and effective public that embrace knowledge as a weapon of liberation.  Mills states that it is the duty of “Men of Knowledge” to be Prometheus giving Knowledge of worth to the people, leading them in this endeavor.

“[We need] a free and knowledgeable public to which men of knowledge may address themselves and to which men of power are truly responsible; [that] public and such men-either of power or knowledge, do not now prevail, and accordingly, knowledge does not now have democratic relevance.” (Mills 2008: 136)[14]




WORK

The bulk of Mills’ contribution to the discipline of Sociology is a critical analysis of the American Society in the form of three separate texts: White Collar (1951), The Power Elite (1956) and The Sociological Imagination (1959). This trilogy is striking deconstruction of American Society at the time, and holds with it prophetic messages for the future.








“The existence of middle managers indicates a further separation of worker from owner or top manager.”- C. Wright Mills

This book was a long time coming for Mills.  Drawing from Weber’s Economy and Society, Marx’s Das Capital and his own biography (His father was in middle management), Mills presents us with a scathing dismantling of the US class structure of the time. He begins with a general explanation of corporate America and the US class system, playing close attention to the middle class.  But as the book continues, he reveals the unsettling truth that being “middle class” is a state of false consciousness of the powerful.  Those that define themselves as “middle class” are controlled by those above them.  Mills goes through many different institutions and industries (from education, lawyers, medicine, and corporations), indicating how they all are systematized; a part of the same symbiotic bureaucratic organism.  In this bureaucracy, dehumanization and rationalization are the new normal (creating what Weber called “an Iron Cage”) that causes careers to dry up just as there is an outpouring of low wage, low skill jobs. The result is a social stratification that is so acute, there is nothing in the middle.  Since education is farther and farther out of reach, there is a limited number of people who can get a high paying career while too many people are trying to fight for the “scraps” of minimum wage work. Mills believes this will not stop and will inevitably lead to regulation of the expression of emotion, mutated into a state of bureaucratic “false friendliness” which outside of any type of hierarchical structure we call “manners”.
Another major outcome of this bureaucratization is the “personality market”; where we attempt to create, unique and divergent identities, then try and sell them to others. Meanwhile, we feign interest in other’s lives just to manipulate them. Mills then adds to this the Marxian idea of alienation, that in such a bureaucratized system men are estranged from each other, therefore allowing for the control to be complete.
Of the three major text that make up Mills core treatise, White Collar is the book that is read the least.  This could be due to the fact that it was his first major work to get attention. Another reason could be that here he rests on the work of classic scholars like Marx and Weber that his work seems lacking in its contribution by comparison.[15] Finally, in true movie trilogy style, this text is often overshadowed by its impressive sequel The Power Elite.  


“The class and status and power systems of local societies are not equality weighted; they are not autonomous. Like the economic and political systems of the nation, the prestige and the power systems are no longer made up of decentralized little hierarchies, each having only thin and distant connections, if any at all with the others.”- C. Wright Mills

The second book in C. Wright Mills’ American criticism trilogy is also widely considered to be his magnum opus.  Much of Mills ideas and themes that he is known for (see above) are explored in this text.  This is also the text that is the most widely influential outside the discipline of Sociology. Written in 1956, many of the key ideas of the text showed up in President Eisenhower’s farewell Presidential address in the form of The Military Industrial Complex (MIC)[16]
The Military Industrial complex is the term[17] that explain the collusion between the three most powerful social institutions in the United States; the military, the economy, and the government.  These institutions have particular representatives that are members of the titular “Power Elite” (namely CEOs, high ranking military officials, and politicians). Mills makes it a point to say that this structure is outside of party politics.  This system continues to be in place regardless of who’s in power.  Since its inception after WWII, when we learned that war and military production stimulates the economy (it having saved us from the great depression of the 1930’s), the military industrial complex has been maintained even in times of peace. President Clinton used it in the routine bombing of the Balkans particularly Kosovo, and later Iraq. President Bush used in to expand Military presence in the Middle East and beginning the War on Terror after Sept 11, 2001 which granted more military power in the executive office.  It was this power that President Obama not only didn’t give up, he refined it into a seamless drone war machine. Given the rhetoric President Trump has been spewing, I do not see this long history stopping anytime soon.
It was through The Power Elite that Mills is the most prophetic. He outlines a system that we not only still use (as I have illustrated above) but expanded; bringing think tanks and the media into the fold. Think tanks being the private organizations that write public policy which get introduced into congress by politicians.  The media is the catchall term for the news and entertainment industry which shapes public perception, and in turn, policy.  Since its publication the ideas brimming from the pages of The Power Elite have been expanded on by authors, journalists, activists and scholars[18] keeping the spirit of Mills’ work alive and well.


In The Sociological Imagination the final third of his critical analysis of American society, Mills becomes reflective. Much of his criticism, which in the previous books were focused externally, in this text it is focused internally on what good academia and the intellectual community can do to eliminate, or at least greatly reduce social ills. Mills criticizes academia that we have not done enough.  To the point that he mentions that the ideals of reason and freedom are in direct peril.  This is due to the way social complacency has been bureaucratized in to a system of distraction and consumption. It is this complacency that blurs the line between the access, use and outcome of that behavior, resource or opportunity.

Mills explains (1959)
           
            A High level of bureaucratic rationality and of technology does not mean a high level of individual or social intelligence. From the first you cannot infer the second. For social technological, or bureaucratic rationality is not merely a grand summation of the individual will and capacity to reason. The very chance to acquire that will and that capacity seems in fact often to be decreased by it. [Bureaucratization and Rationality] are a means of tyranny and manipulation; a means of expropriating the very chance to reason, the very capacity to act as a free man.  (p.168-169).

 One solution that Mills came up with was a set of guidelines for fledgling intellectuals. Through these guidelines (in the Appendix of the book) Mills gave us a blueprint on how to be better academics, intellectuals and scholars. Mills believes that through this solution we can challenge the bureaucracy and become a populace, and more importantly an electorate, that is intelligent, knowledgeable and informed.  By becoming independent intellectuals, Mills also believes we can not only break out of this toxic and treacherous apathy that the bureaucracy lulls us into, but challenge the system to move from an oligarchy to something more egalitarian.

My Favorite Text



“Democracy requires that those who bear the consequences of decisions have enough knowledge to hold the decision makers accountable.”- C. Wright Mills in The Causes of World War III

Outside of his critical Analysis of America trilogy.  Much of Mills’ work is forgotten lost or put by the wayside.  Books like The Marxists, Listen Yankee (which Tom Hayden is reviving) and my personal favorite… The Causes of World War III.   Like his other work, The Causes of World War III is a scathing critique of the American socio-political system. What makes this text different is in detail and tone. Written in 1958, post The Power Elite, Mills seems angry, more aggressive in his tone. The attacks he wages seems more personal in nature as he dismantles the organizational system he had explained in the previous book.  He outlines a list of six criteria that will inevitably lead to world war three, which Mills believes, that if we fail to change our ways, it will lead to a perpetual war, one without end.


The Causes of WWIII
1)      Bureaucracies
2)      Military institutions shape economic life- (a war machine)
3)      The permanent war economy- (Capitalism)
4)      Lack of diplomacy – tanks before talking
5)      Mass indifference of the Public –Media (p 78)
6)      “Crackpot Realism” Ideology (p 89)

The first two of these causes Mills expertly outlines in The Power Elite. The rest of the causes are exclusive to this particular text. In explaining the third cause of “Capitalism” Mills takes his cues from Marx, believing as he did, that we needed to explore other options other than Capitalism (especially one that is based in Military production and proliferation) such as an economic democracy.  But it is in the causes of a lack of diplomacy, indifference of the public and what he coins as “Crackpot Realism” that eerily predicts our recent, and current political climate.
 Mills believes that the lack of diplomacy Americans generally have is due, in part, to our history of imperialism and colonialism.  Speaking generationally, many of us have not had to compromise. Usually any geo-political difficulty we face is often met with military action.  We have a long history of genocide and the use of force to promote and achieve our interests around the world. When historically you have been able to get what you want, by a superior show of force, you do not even have the social tools (language)[19] to begin a dialogue with someone else let alone properly ask for what you want in order to come to a mutually beneficial agreement with another party. Therefore, blissful in our ignorance and misunderstanding we often rationalize this polemic behavior through national rhetoric and calls for patriotism[20]. As Mills says in no uncertain terms: “The Absence of an American Program for Peace is the major cause of the thrust and drift of toward World War III.”
A tool in the creation and maintenance of war is the control of the public and public perception. Mills believed that as people become politically indifferent, they will also become morally indifferent, a mass society of individuals whom have willfully given up their power sometimes without their knowledge. The media is a tool that constructs this indifference.  A perfect example of this dangerous complacency is the internet.  While there is the potential to use the internet to be well informed and politically and morally active/invested in our society; many of us (if not most) use it to escape, to decompress and relieve ourselves of the stress of our  private orbits.[21] Through social media and streaming video services we can live within a personal bubble, mainly because that bubble is exponentially mobile, never having to step outside of it, or have our ideas values and behaviors challenged in any way[22] Additionally, since most media that people consume are owned by only 6 corporations (Time Warner, Disney, Viacom, CBS, News Corp and Comcast) we being provided with not only limited information but a limited perspective on the world.  Mills makes a point to say that when this happens, we become desensitized to the real horrors of the world, especially war.   It is this mass indifference, moral or otherwise, that leads to war and allows it to continue.
“Crackpot Realism” is a term coined by Mills to define the perception of the world held by the elite-and by acting upon this perception of the world results in World War III. Mills’ explanation of “crackpot realism” has ten components.
Chief among them are:
·         Preparing for war rather than peace
·         War is complex so trust governing to military leaders
·         Tying the economy to war and military production
·         Problems of war are easier to handle…peace is more difficult
·         Believe in “Winning” but winning is not clearly defined

Crackpot realism easily explains every military endeavor since World War II. But the military action that epitomizes the notion of Crackpot realism is “The War on Terror”.  This is the first time we have declared war on an ideology rather than a specific enemy outright[23] Therefore, our enemies will change and be cycled out like a revolving door. In his state of the union address, then President Bush outlined “the access of evil” that not only included Iraq and Afghanistan, but included Syria, North Korea, and Iran.  This means that since its inception, The War on Terror was never designed to have an end.  It was the perpetual war that would allow the never ending continuance of the military war machine.  The War on Terror is the Millsian World War III.



LIMITATIONS

            The personal, is political”- C. Wright Mills

            All sociologists have limitations. Individually, we do not have all of the answers to every aspect of society that is out there. It is just not humanly possible. The structure and operation of graduate school intensifies and makes clearly visible a Sociologist’s limitations, mainly because through the process of getting advanced degrees we have to specialize in a particular area of our field. Typically in the specialization begins in the Master’s Program when we are asked to choose an area in our discipline where we would focus our efforts.  Since the school is designed for students to follow a particular sequence, and the cost of school increasing exponentially, most  student’s specialize early in graduate school to minimize the cost of taking ”unnecessary” courses.  This is only compounded when students have to produce their own research during their pursuit of a Ph.D. Therefore, there are a lot of gaps in an individual Sociologist’s knowledge of society, and C. Wright Mills is no different.
            Mills’ greatest limitation in his work is that he fails to consider the impact of race and gender in our society. Mills is very terse on the subject if he talked about it at all.  Some scholars would look to his work in Listen Yankee the narrative about a family in Cuba as his contribution to the discussion of race. I disagree. As someone who specializes in the study of inequality; specifically stratification and injustice that focuses on race, gender, class, sexuality and disability discrimination; it pains me that Mills very brief on this subject outside of his discussions of social class.
Mills’ silence on the issues of race and gender can partially be explained by historical context and through Mills own biography. It is plausible to believe that growing up in the early 1920’s, in Texas that he would have adopted a form of toxic masculinity that was common among abrasive white blue collar heterosexual men of the time. If you couple this historical context with Mills’ biographical experiences of not having strong male role models (neither his father or other male figures in his life) and having an abundance of female relatives as company (Kerr: 2009). It is understandable that in such a gender divisive climate (where the gender binary is considered, publically, to be set in stone…normalized through biological explanations) without a male reference group to look up to, being around a majority of women, it is plausible that Mills was pressured to prove his masculinity.  Mills’ subsequently did this when he rejected the female relationships he had within his family and began, at an early age, to emulate his grandfather, an intellectual in his own right, but a stereotypical Texas in both look an attitude (Kerr, 2009).  This division was so complete within Mills that later in his work he disparaged women’s place within society, and their aptitude (Mills, 1951). Yet, while we understand it, it cannot be condoned.  Mills’ remarks are still upsetting and deflates Mills as an academic for me, personally. I am still able to go back to Mills’ work, despite this glaring omission, because much like Marx or any other classical, white, heterosexual scholar; their work speaks from a place of privilege that is invisible to them.  
 What makes this race and gender criticism unique in Mills’ case is the way in which his work is often used by marginalized groups in an attempt to amass political and social power. Even though Mills never spoke to them directly, since his death, civil rights groups dealing with race and gender have been using his work to motivate their struggle. The most notable example of this is feminisms use of Millsian quote “ The personal is political.”.  While Mills was talking about the relationship between biography and history in an attempt to motivate people out of complacency; the feminist movement used his words to identify their plight, and to use their collective biography as a mechanism to foster worth within society in the form of access to jobs and other resources, equal pay, sexual equality and many more issues that are still being fought today.
There are those that have written and spoken about Mills and his impact on the civil rights movement (Hayden: 2006). Yet, I agree with Michael Burawoy (2008) and often wonder what Mills’ response to these social movements would have been. What brilliance did we miss out on? Or, equally possible, what horrific remark or text could he have created?  Burawoy’s motivation behind his curiosity is his belief that Mills would support this social movements because they are an example of public sociology, of which Mills was the founder (posthumously) (Burawoy 2008). I wonder if the use of the kinds of grassroots social activism/antagonism (that Mills promoted in in his work and in his life) by the feminist movement and other marginalized groups would have softened him, made him supportive of the peril they are in. I would like to think so. Thus, despite his limitations C. Wright Mills is an important Sociologist and needs to be continuously read and remembered.



CONCLUSION
            C. Wright Mills is one of the most important Sociologist. If there was a Mount Rushmore of Sociology he would be right next to Marx, Weber and Durkheim. Not only is his work still being read and written about nearly sixty years after his death, but many have acknowledged him for his contributions to subfields/topics in Sociology that he never directly addressed by name. One such field is the study of Social problems. All of Mills work revolve around the identification and the elimination of Social Problems.  Mills is often cited in introduction to Social Problems textbooks as a way to lay the foundations of a course/study of Social problems.  This link is further strengthened by the existence of the C. Wright Mills Award.
Starting in 1964, just two years after his death, The Society for the Study of Social Problems created the C. Wright Mills award for the work that best exemplifies “spirit” of C. Wright Mills work. The book needs to fit the following criteria:
  
1) Critically addresses an issue of contemporary public importance,
2) Brings to the topic a fresh, imaginative perspective,
3) Advances social scientific understanding of the topic,
4) Displays a theoretically informed view and empirical orientation,
5) Evinces quality in style of writing,
6) Explicitly or implicitly contains implications for courses of action

In the spirit of revisionist history, the awarding of this prize to many scholars that write about the numerous threats experienced by people of color and women, allows Mills’ academic descendants the ability to transcend Mills’ academic limitations.  That is an enduring legacy.


VIDEOS

            Here are a couple of great lectures on the brilliance of C. Wright Mills

1) John Summers





2) Colin Samson



REFERENCES

Burawoy, Michael (2008) “An Open Letter to C. Wright Mills” Antipode 10:3 pp-365-375 retrieved on [ January 23rd 2017] http://burawoy.berkeley.edu/PS/Open%20Letter%20to%20Mills.pdf  
Kerr Keith (2009) Postmodern Cowboy: C. Wright Mills and the New 21st Century Sociology Boulder, CO: Paradigm
Hayden T   (2006)  Radical Nomad: C. Wright Mills and his times  Boulder, CO: Paradigm
Summers, John H. eds. (2008) The Politics of Truth: Selected Writings of C. Wright Mills New York: Oxford University Press
Wright Mills C (1951) White Collar: The American Middle Classes  New York: Oxford University Press
_________ (1956) The Power Elite. New York: Oxford University Press
_________ (1958) The Causes of World War Three New York: Oxford University Press
_________ (1959) The Sociological Imagination. New York: Oxford University Press



[1] Structural Functionalism, Symbolic Interactionism and Power/Conflict
[2] There is also W. E. B. Dubois, Harriet Martineau Jane Addams, Fredrick Douglas, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Marianne Weber and Sojourner Truth
[3] This is an easy task, and it is the bare minimum we can do in order to have representation. Just as film and television needs to do its part in increasing diversity in the media, so to do Professors (especially oblivious white ones) to include the work of people of color and women.
[4] As of this writing Bauman recently passed away at the age of 91
[5] Postmodern Cowboy: C. Wright Mills and a New 21st Century Sociology by Keith Kerr
[6] A Perception I whole heartedly agree with.
[7] After his doctorial defense with Famed Sociologist Howard P. Becker at the University of Madison, Mills reportedly blurted out “Fuck You Howard!” (Kerr 2009:50) 
[8] Kerr (2009) speaks of a time when the establishment once demanded that Mills wear a tie when he lecture. The next day he proceeded to lecture wearing just a tie, undershirt and jeans.
[9] C. Wright Mills: An American Utopian by Alan Horowitz
[10] Though due to Mills’ personality being described as “corrosive” by a lot of his colleagues at the time I tend to think this restriction was purposeful
[11] The would be “The Promise” in the book titled The Sociological Imagination
[12] Granted, since 2000 there have been a retrospective, a biography, an a book of selected writings published
[13] It should be noted Mills did enjoy a brief resurgence in 2012 during the occupy wall street movement along with Karl Marx
[14] The Politics of Truth: Selected Writings of C. Wright Mills
[15] I find this idea false, considering that the extension of Marxian and Weberian ideas outlined in White Collar sets up his prophetic message of corporate greed and the alienation of labor. He basically predicted the 1980’s nearly 30 years before. Also, since President Trump is going back to the Economic plan of the 1980’s I would assume that all of the problems Mills predicted (that came true in the 1980’s) will soon be relevant again.
[16]  Eisenhower was the president of Columbia University when C. Wright Mills was a Professor there and composing The Power Elite
[17] Credited to Eisenhower but the idea was Mills
[18] Most notably G. William Domhoff
[19] This basically means that we don’t know how to talk to other countries often times due to our retention of cultural ethnocentric ideas.  This can be illustrated at the micro level by identifying just how many Americans (especially those who are white) can only speak one language.
[20] Whether that be  “Make America Great again”; or “America First” as an example.
[21] This is another Millsian term to explain the trap of complacency that most people find themselves in. The idea is that, people who are trapped in their own private orbit only care about what is in front of them in their daily lives. Never looking outside their own biography.
[22] This is compounded by dejure and defacto forms of segregation whether that be by race, class, gender, sexuality or disability
[23] Yes in World War II we were fighting fascism but it wasn’t fascism as a concept we still had three major enemies in that war.