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An umbrella term for the habit of over-analyzing every single human interaction until it becomes a textbook case study of systemic oppression, power dynamics, or cultural hegemony. It’s what happens when you can't just enjoy a party because you're too busy deconstructing the guest list as a socio-economic map of the city's class structure, and the playlist as a tool of cultural imperialism. While useful for understanding the world, in practice, it can make you the most insufferable person at the dinner table, unable to simply say "please pass the salt" without launching into a lecture on the geopolitics of sodium mining.
Example: "He couldn't just watch the Super Bowl; he had to deliver a dissertation on its role in reinforcing patriarchal norms and militaristic pageantry. He had a PhD in critical social sciences theory and zero invitations to future Super Bowl parties."
by Dumu The Void February 14, 2026
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Critical Social Sciences

The application of critical theory to the study of society: examining how power, ideology, and social structures shape human life, and how knowledge about society can serve emancipatory interests. Critical Social Sciences don't just describe society—they critique it, revealing oppression, exposing ideology, and working toward transformation. Sociology, anthropology, political science, and economics, when done critically, become tools for understanding and changing unjust structures, not just documenting them.
"Your study describes inequality, but Critical Social Sciences ask: why does it exist? Who benefits? How could it be different? Description without critique is just photography of a car crash—interesting but useless to the victims."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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Critical Social Sciences

An umbrella term for social science approaches that explicitly incorporate critique of power, ideology, and social structures into their methodology. Critical Social Sciences don't just describe society—they analyze how society is organized, who benefits, and how change might be possible. They draw on Marx, Foucault, feminist theory, critical race theory, and other traditions to examine the relationships between knowledge, power, and social organization. Critical Social Sciences include critical sociology, critical political science, critical economics, and others—all united by the commitment to understanding society in order to transform it.
"Mainstream economics describes markets; critical economics asks who markets serve. That's Critical Social Sciences—not just describing, but critiquing. Not just understanding, but changing. Social science without critique is just documentation; critique without social science is just opinion. Together, they're tools for freedom."
by Dumu The Void March 3, 2026
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The application of Critical Theory to the social sciences—examining how disciplines like sociology, political science, and economics are shaped by power, how they can serve domination or liberation, and how they might be transformed. Critical Theory of Social Sciences asks: How have social sciences justified inequality? How have they been complicit in colonialism, racism, sexism? How might they serve struggles for justice? Drawing on Marx, Foucault, feminist theory, and critical race theory, it insists that social science is never neutral—it's always political. The question is which politics it serves.
"Economics says markets are efficient. Critical Theory of Social Sciences asks: efficient for whom? At what cost? Markets produce winners and losers—economics that ignores that is ideology. Social science can describe or it can critique. Critical theory chooses critique—not for its own sake, but for justice."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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