Distinguishing the Power of Agency from Agentic Power: A Note on Weber and the "Black Box" of Personal Agency
Sociological Theory, Vol. 27, No. 4, Pg. 407-418.
Colin Campbell
The concept of agency, although central to many
sociological debates, has remained frustratingly elusive to pin down.
This article is an attempt to open up what has been called the "black
box" of personal agency by distinguishing clearly between two
contrasting conceptions of the phenomenon. These two conceptions are
very apparent in the manner in which the concept is defined in
sociological reference works, resembling as it does a similar contrast
in the treatment of the concept of power. The two are referred to as
type 1 and type 2 or the power of agency as compared with agentic
power, the essential contrast being that the first refers to an actor's
ability to initiate and maintain a program of action while the second
refers to an actor's ability to act independently of the constraining
power of social structure. The nature of these two forms of personal
agency is then illustrated by referring to material taken from Weber's essay The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism,
this essay itself being understood as an argument that focuses on the
crucial role played by an increase in the power of agency in ushering
in the modern world. Finally, it is argued that these two conceptions
of agency possess no given logical relationship with each other, it
being perfectly possible for individuals to be possessed of
considerable power of agency while lacking agentic power, and vice
versa. It is therefore concluded that it is important, in all
discussions of human agency, to distinguish clearly between these two
forms.
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