For fifteen years, starting in 1950, Schoeck would work as a professor at various U.S. universities. In 1953, he taught philosophy at Fairmont State College, followed by a two-year stint at Yale. At Emory University he was awarded a full professorship in sociology. During the 1950s, Schoeck published some works in German, and translated Joachim Wach's Sociology of Religion into German.
In 1965, Schoeck returned to Germany, where he obtained a chair in sociology at the Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, which he would occupy until his retirement in 1990.
Schoeck, who was also a columnist of the Welt am Sonntag for twenty years, died of cancer in 1993.
Envy: A Theory of Social Behavior
Schoeck gained international fame with his book Der Neid: Eine Theorie der Gesellschaft (Envy: A Theory of Social Behavior), published in 1966, with the first English translation appearing in 1969. Written without much technical jargon, the book would receive widespread appreciation, even outside the academic community. The book became somewhat of a bestseller, and was translated into more than ten languages.[citation needed]
Paul Dumouchel said in the book Schoeck speaks about "the origin of envy,...its cause and function within society" and also "documents the importance of envy in literature, philosophy, and in many social sciences". He went on to say that Schoeck puts forward two propositions - first, that envy has played a large part in forming human society, and that, secondly, the role of envy often remains hidden.[1]
Schoeck also argued that as envy was a natural part of human evolution and could not be suppressed, it was important to channel the emotion. He also suggested that socialism and democracy were put forward as ideas by members of society who were not able "to deal with their own envy",[2] and Karl Marx's idea of primitive communism was "entirely mistaken".[3]
A polemicist against the New Left movements of the 1960s, Schoeck criticized their ideas from a conservative-liberal viewpoint. The egalitarian and anticapitalist mentality of the leftish generation was the particular target of Schoeck's ire.
Works (selected)
Karl Mannheim als Wissenssoziologe, Dissertation, 1948
Nietzsches Philosophie des „Menschlich-Allzumenschlichen“. Kritische Darstellung der Aphorismen-Welt der mittleren Schaffenszeit als Versuch einer Neuorientierung des Gesamtbildes, 1948
Soziologie. Geschichte ihrer Probleme. 1952. 2., wesentlich überarbeitete und erweiterte Auflage unter dem Titel Die Soziologie und die Gesellschaften. Problemsicht und Problemlösung von Beginn bis zur Gegenwart. 1964. Orbis academicus Band I/3. Verlag Karl Alber, Freiburg / München
USA. Motive und Strukturen, 1958
Was heißt politisch unmöglich?, 1959
Scientism and Values, 1960
Relativism and the Study of Man, 1961
Financing Medical Care, 1962
Psychiatry and Responsibility, 1962
Der Neid. Eine Theorie der Gesellschaft. Verlag Karl Alber, Freiburg/München 1966, 2. Auflage 1968 (späterer Titel: Der Neid und die Gesellschaft)
Kleines soziologisches Wörterbuch, 1969 (ab 1971: Soziologisches Wörterbuch)
Ist Leistung unanständig?, 1971 (mehrmals erweitert)
Vorsicht Schreibtischtäter. Politik und Presse in der Bundesrepublik, 1972
Entwicklungshilfe. Politische Humanität, 1972
Die Lust am schlechten Gewissen, 1973
Das Geschäft mit dem Pessimismus, 1975
Schülermanipulation, 1976
Das Recht auf Ungleichheit, 1979
Der Arzt zwischen Politik und Patient, 1983
Die zwölf Irrtümer unseres Jahrhunderts, 1985
Kinderverstörung. Die mißbrauchte Kindheit - Umschulung auf eine andere Republik, 1989
^Back Choi, Young (April 1990). "Envy: A Theory of Social Behavior by Helmut Schoeck". Southern Economic Journal. 56 (4): 1140–1142. doi:10.2307/1059904. JSTOR1059904.