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Sociological Theory 11th ed. [Minkštas viršelis]

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(University of Maryland, USA), (MacEwan University, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 832 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x173x25 mm, weight: 1106 g, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: Sage Publications, Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1071832344
  • ISBN-13: 9781071832349
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 832 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x173x25 mm, weight: 1106 g, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: Sage Publications, Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1071832344
  • ISBN-13: 9781071832349
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Sociological Theory gives you a comprehensive overview of the major theorists and schools of sociological thought, from sociology's 19th century origins through the early 21st century. Written by an author team that includes one of the leading contemporary thinkers, the text integrates key theories with biographical sketches of theorists, placing them in historical and intellectual context. The Eleventh Edition includes examples of premodern sociological theory from Islamic scholar Ibn Khaldun, Harriet Martineau’s feminist writings contextualized within the history of sociological thought, discussions of actor-network theory through Donna Haraway’s work on cyborgs and companion species, illustrations of historical comparative sociology with Saskia Sassen’s concepts of the global city and expulsions, and more ways to help you to understand sociology’s major theories.
Biographical and Autobiographical Sketches xix
Preface xx
Acknowledgments xxii
About the Authors xxiii
PART I CLASSICAL SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY
1(184)
Chapter 1 A Historical Sketch of Sociological Theory: The Early Years
2(39)
Introduction
3(2)
Premodern Sociological Theory
5(4)
Social Forces in the Development of Sociological Theory
9(4)
Political Revolutions
9(1)
The Industrial Revolution and the Rise of Capitalism
10(1)
Colonialism
10(1)
The Rise of Socialism
11(1)
Feminism
11(1)
Urbanization
12(1)
Religious Change
12(1)
The Growth of Science
12(1)
Intellectual Forces and the Rise of Sociological Theory
13(1)
The Enlightenment
13(1)
The Conservative Reaction to the Enlightenment
14(1)
The Development of French Sociology
14(6)
Alexis de Tocqueville (1805--1859)
15(1)
Henri de Saint-Simon (1760--1825)
16(1)
Auguste Comte (1798--1857)
16(2)
Emile Durkheim (1858--1917)
18(1)
Social Facts
18(1)
Religion
19(1)
The Development of German Sociology
20(4)
The Roots and Nature of the Theories of Karl Marx (1818--1883)
20(1)
Hegel
20(1)
Feuerbach
21(1)
Marx, Hegel, and Feuerbach
21(1)
Political Economy
22(1)
Marx and Sociology
23(1)
Marx's Theory
23(1)
The Roots and Nature of the Theories of Max Weber (1864--1920) and Georg Simmel (1858--1918)
24(6)
Weber and Marx
24(1)
Other Influences on Weber
25(1)
Weber's Theory
26(1)
The Acceptance of Weber's Theory
27(1)
Simmeis Theory
28(2)
The Origins of British Sociology
30(6)
Political Economy, Ameliorism, and Social Evolution
31(1)
Political Economy
31(1)
Ameliorism
32(1)
Social Evolution
32(1)
Herbert Spencer (1820--1903)
32(1)
Spencer and Comte
33(1)
Evolutionary Theory
33(1)
The Reaction Against Spencer in Britain
34(1)
Harriet Martineau (1802--1876)
34(2)
The Key Figure in Early Italian Sociology
36(1)
Non-European Classical Theory
37(4)
Chapter 2 Karl Marx
41(34)
Introduction
41(2)
The Dialectic
43(1)
Dialectical Method
44(2)
Fact and Value
44(1)
Reciprocal Relations
44(1)
Past, Present, Future
45(1)
No Inevitabilities
45(1)
Actors and Structures
46(1)
Human Potential
46(5)
Labor
47(4)
Alienation
51(2)
The Structures of Capitalist Society
53(8)
Commodities
54(1)
Fetishism of Commodities
55(2)
Capital, Capitalists, and the Proletariat
57(1)
Exploitation
58(1)
Class Conflict
59(2)
Capitalism as a Good Thing
61(1)
Materialist Conception of History
61(2)
Cultural Aspects of Capitalist Society
63(4)
Ideology
63(1)
Freedom, Equality, and Ideology
64(2)
Religion
66(1)
Marx's Economics: A Case Study
67(2)
Communism
69(1)
Criticisms
69(2)
Contemporary Applications
71(4)
Chapter 3 Emile Durkheim
75(35)
Introduction
75(2)
Social Facts
77(8)
Material and Nonmaterial Social Facts
80(1)
Types of Nonmaterial Social Facts
81(1)
Morality
81(1)
Collective Conscience
82(1)
Collective Representations
82(1)
Social Currents
83(2)
The Division of Labor in Society
85(5)
Mechanical and Organic Solidarity
86(1)
Dynamic Density
87(1)
Repressive and Restitutive Law
87(1)
Normal and Pathological
88(1)
Justice
89(1)
Suicide
90(5)
The Four Types of Suicide
91(1)
Egoistic Suicide
92(1)
Altruistic Suicide
93(1)
Anomic Suicide
93(1)
Fatalistic Suicide
94(1)
Suicide Rates and Social Reform
94(1)
The Elementary Forms of Religious Life
95(6)
Early and Late Durkheimian Theory
95(1)
Theory of Religion---The Sacred and the Profane
96(1)
Beliefs, Rituals, and Church
97(1)
Why Primitive?
97(1)
Collective Effervescence
98(1)
Totemism
99(1)
Sociology of Knowledge
100(1)
Categories of Understanding
100(1)
Moral Education and Social Reform
101(3)
Morality
102(1)
Moral Education
103(1)
Occupational Associations
104(1)
Criticisms
104(2)
Contemporary Applications
106(4)
Chapter 4 Max Weber
110(44)
Methodology
111(10)
History and Sociology
111(3)
Verstehen
114(1)
Causality
115(1)
Ideal Types
116(2)
Values
118(1)
Values and Teaching
119(1)
Values and Research
119(2)
Substantive Sociology
121(10)
What Is Sociology?
121(1)
Social Action
122(1)
Class, Status, and Party
123(1)
Structures of Authority
124(1)
Rational-Legal Authority
125(3)
Traditional Authority
128(1)
Charismatic Authority
129(2)
Types of Authority and the "Real World"
131(1)
Rationalization
131(10)
Types of Rationality
132(1)
An Overarching Theory?
133(1)
Formal and Substantive Rationality
134(1)
Rationalization in Various Social Settings
135(6)
Religion and the Rise of Capitalism
141(7)
Paths to Salvation
142(4)
Religion and Capitalism in China
146(2)
Religion and Capitalism in India
148(1)
Criticisms
148(2)
Contemporary Applications
150(4)
Chapter 5 Georg Simmel
154(31)
Primary Concerns
155(5)
Levels and Areas of Concern
157(1)
Dialectical Thinking
158(1)
Fashion
158(1)
Life
159(1)
More-Life and More-Than-Life
159(1)
Individual Consciousness and Individuality
160(2)
Social Interaction ("Association")
162(5)
Interaction: Forms and Types
163(1)
Social Geometry
163(2)
Social Types
165(1)
Social Forms
166(1)
Social Structures and Worlds
167(2)
Objective Culture
169(1)
The Philosophy of Money
170(7)
Money and Value
171(1)
Money, Reification, and Rationalization
172(2)
Negative Effects
174(1)
Tragedy of Culture
175(2)
Secrecy: A Case Study in Simmel's Sociology
177(4)
Secrecy and Social Relationships
178(2)
Other Thoughts on Secrecy
180(1)
Criticisms
181(1)
Contemporary Applications
182(3)
PART II MODERN SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY: THE MAJOR SCHOOLS
185(330)
Chapter 6 A Historical Sketch of Sociological Theory: The Later Years
186(42)
Early American Sociological Theory
188(14)
Politics
188(1)
Social Change and Intellectual Currents
188(1)
Herbert Spencer's Influence on Sociology
189(2)
Thorstein Veblen (1857--1929)
191(1)
Joseph Schumpeter (1883--1950)
192(1)
The Chicago School
192(1)
Early Chicago Sociology
192(5)
The Waning of Chicago Sociology
197(1)
Women in Early American Sociology
197(1)
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860--1935)
198(1)
The Du Bois-Atlanta School
199(3)
Sociological Theory to Midcentury
202(6)
The Rise of Harvard, the Ivy League, and Structural Functionalism
202(1)
Talcott Parsons (1902--1979)
202(1)
George Homans (1910--1989)
203(1)
Developments in Marxian Theory
204(3)
Karl Mannheim and the Sociology of Knowledge
207(1)
Sociological Theory From Midcentury
208(10)
Structural Functionalism: Peak and Decline
208(1)
Radical Sociology in America: C. Wright Mills
208(2)
The Development of Conflict Theory
210(1)
The Birth of Exchange Theory
211(1)
Dramaturgical Analysis: The Work of Erving Goffman
212(1)
The Development of Sociologies of Everyday Life
212(1)
Phenomenological Sociology and the Work of Alfred Schutz (1899--1959)
212(1)
Ethnomethodology
213(1)
The Rise of Marxian Sociology
214(1)
The Challenge of Feminist Theory
215(1)
Theories of Race and Colonialism
216(1)
Structuralism and Poststructuralism
217(1)
Late-Twentieth-Century Integrative Theory
218(2)
Micro-Macro Integration
218(1)
Agency-Structure Integration
218(1)
Theoretical Syntheses
219(1)
Theories of Modernity and Postmodernity
220(2)
The Defenders of Modernity
220(1)
The Proponents of Postmodernity
221(1)
Social Theory in the Twenty-First Century
222(6)
Theories of Consumption
222(1)
Theories of Globalization
223(1)
Theories of Science, Technology, and Nature
224(4)
Chapter 7 Structural Functionalism, Systems Theory, and Conflict Theory
228(39)
Structural Functionalism
229(22)
The Functional Theory of Stratification and Its Critics
230(3)
Talcott Parsons's Structural Functionalism
233(1)
AGIL
233(1)
The Action System
234(7)
Change and Dynamism in Parsonsian Theory
241(2)
Robert Merton's Structural Functionalism
243(1)
A Structural-Functional Model
243(5)
Social Structure and Anomie
248(1)
The Major Criticisms
248(1)
Substantive Criticisms
249(1)
Methodological and Logical Criticisms
250(1)
Systems Theory
251(4)
System and Environment
252(1)
Autopoiesis
253(1)
Differentiation
254(1)
Segmentary Differentiation
254(1)
Stratificatory Differentiation
254(1)
Center-Periphery Differentiation
255(1)
Differentiations of Functional Systems
255(1)
Conflict Theory
255(12)
The Work of Ralf Dahrendorf
256(1)
Authority
257(1)
Groups, Conflict, and Change
258(1)
The Major Criticisms and Efforts to Deal With Them
259(1)
A More Integrative Conflict Theory
260(1)
Social Stratification
261(2)
Other Social Domains
263(4)
Chapter 8 Varieties of Neo-Marxian Theory
267(50)
Economic Determinism
267(1)
Hegelian Marxism
268(4)
Georg Lukacs
269(1)
Reification
269(1)
Class and False Consciousness
270(1)
Antonio Gramsci
271(1)
Critical Theory
272(14)
The Major Critiques of Social and Intellectual Life
272(1)
Criticisms of Marxian Theory
272(1)
Criticisms of Positivism
273(1)
Criticisms of Sociology
273(1)
Critique of Modern Society
273(2)
Critique of Culture
275(1)
The Major Contributions
276(1)
Subjectivity
276(1)
Dialectics
277(2)
Criticisms of Critical Theory
279(1)
The Ideas of Jurgen Habermas
280(1)
Differences With Marx
280(1)
Rationalization
281(1)
Communication
282(1)
The Work of Axel Honneth
283(1)
The Ideas of Axel Honneth
283(2)
Later Developments in Cultural Critique
285(1)
Neo-Marxian Economic Sociology
286(7)
Capital and Labor
286(1)
Monopoly Capital
287(1)
Labor and Monopoly Capital
288(2)
Other Work on Labor and Capital
290(1)
Fordism and Post-Fordism
291(2)
Historically Oriented Marxism
293(7)
The Modern World-System
294(1)
Geographical Expansion
295(1)
Worldwide Division of Labor
296(1)
Development of Core States
296(1)
Later Developments
297(2)
World-Systems Theory Today
299(1)
Neo-Marxian Spatial Analysis
300(6)
The Production of Space
301(2)
Trialectics
303(1)
Spaces of Hope
304(2)
Post-Marxist Theory
306(11)
Analytical Marxism
307(2)
Postmodern Marxian Theory
309(1)
Hegemony and Radical Democracy
310(1)
Continuities and Time-Space Compression
311(1)
After Marxism
312(1)
Criticisms of Post-Marxism
313(4)
Chapter 9 Symbolic Interactionism
317(43)
The Major Historical Roots
317(4)
Pragmatism
318(1)
Behaviorism
319(1)
Between Reductionism and Sociologism
320(1)
The Ideas of George Herbert Mead
321(12)
The Priority of the Social
321(1)
The Act
322(1)
Gestures
323(2)
Significant Symbols
325(1)
Mind
326(1)
Self
327(1)
Child Development
328(1)
Generalized Other
329(1)
"I" and "Me"
330(1)
Society
331(2)
Symbolic Interactionism: The Basic Principles
333(8)
Capacity for Thought
333(1)
Thinking and Interaction
334(1)
Learning Meanings and Symbols
335(1)
Action and Interaction
336(1)
Making Choices
336(1)
Groups and Societies
337(4)
The Self and the Work of Erving Goffman
341(7)
The Self
341(1)
Dramaturgy
342(3)
Impression Management
345(1)
Role Distance
345(1)
Stigma
346(1)
Frame Analysis
346(2)
The Sociology of Emotions
348(8)
What Is Emotion?
348(1)
Shame: The Social Emotion
349(2)
The Invisibility of Shame
351(1)
Emotion Management and Emotion Work
352(1)
Feeling Rules
353(1)
Commercialization of Feeling
354(2)
Criticisms
356(1)
The Future of Symbolic Interactionism
357(3)
Chapter 10 Ethnomethodology
360(25)
Defining Ethnomethodology
360(4)
The Diversification of Ethnomethodology
364(2)
Studies of Institutional Settings
364(1)
Conversation Analysis
364(2)
Some Early Examples
366(2)
Breaching Experiments
366(2)
Accomplishing Gender
368(1)
Conversation Analysis
368(7)
Telephone Conversations: Identification and Recognition
369(1)
Initiating Laughter
370(1)
Generating Applause
371(1)
Booing
372(1)
The Interactive Emergence of Sentences and Stories
373(1)
Integration of Talk and Nonvocal Activities
373(1)
Doing Shyness (and Self-Confidence)
374(1)
Studies of Institutions
375(3)
Job Interviews
375(1)
Executive Negotiations
376(1)
Calls to Emergency Centers
376(1)
Dispute Resolution in Mediation Hearings
377(1)
Criticisms of Traditional Sociology
378(2)
Separated From the Social
378(1)
Confusing Topic and Resource
379(1)
Stresses and Strains in Ethnomethodology
380(2)
Synthesis and Integration
382(3)
Ethnomethodology and the Micro-Macro Order
382(3)
Chapter 11 Exchange, Network, and Rational Choice Theories
385(37)
Exchange Theory
386(19)
Behaviorism
386(1)
Rational Choice Theory
386(3)
The Exchange Theory of George Homans
389(2)
The Success Proposition
391(1)
The Stimulus Proposition
392(1)
The Value Proposition
392(1)
The Deprivation-Satiation Proposition
393(1)
The Aggression-Approval Propositions
393(1)
The Rationality Proposition
394(1)
Peter Blau's Exchange Theory
395(1)
Micro to Macro
396(2)
Norms and Values
398(1)
The Work of Richard Emerson and His Disciples
399(4)
Power-Dependence Theory
403(1)
A More Integrative Exchange Theory
404(1)
Network Theory
405(4)
Basic Concerns and Principles
406(2)
A More Integrative Network Theory
408(1)
Network Exchange Theory
409(2)
Structural Power
410(1)
Strong and Weak Power Structures
410(1)
Rational Choice Theory
411(11)
Foundations of Social Theory
412(4)
Collective Behavior
416(1)
Norms
416(1)
The Corporate Actor
417(1)
Criticisms
418(4)
Chapter 12 Contemporary Feminist Theory (by Patricia Madoo Lengermann and Gillian Niebrugge)
422(44)
Feminism's Basic Questions
423(1)
Historical Framing---The Second Wave: Feminism, Sociology, and Gender
424(2)
Varieties of Contemporary Feminist Theory
426(30)
Gender Difference
428(1)
Theories of Sexual Difference
428(1)
Cultural Feminism
429(1)
Sociological Theories of Difference
430(1)
Institutional Placement
430(1)
Interactional Accomplishments---"Doing Gender"
431(1)
Gender Inequality
432(1)
Liberal Feminism
432(4)
Gender Oppression
436(1)
Psychoanalytic Feminism
436(2)
Radical Feminism
438(3)
Structural Oppression
441(1)
Socialist Feminism
441(6)
Hegemonic Masculinity
447(4)
Intersectionality Theory
451(5)
Challenges to Feminism
456(5)
Feminism and Postmodernism
456(3)
Neoliberalism
459(2)
Feminist Sociological Theorizing
461(5)
The Sociological Problem of Knowledge
461(1)
The Macrosocial Order
462(1)
The Microsocial Order
463(1)
Subjectivity
463(3)
Chapter 13 Micro-Macro and Agency-Structure Integration
466(49)
Micro-Macro Integration
467(21)
Micro-Macro Extremism
467(1)
The Movement Toward Micro-Macro Integration
468(1)
Examples of Micro-Macro Integration
469(1)
Integrated Sociological Paradigm
469(4)
Multidimensional Sociology
473(2)
The Micro Foundations of Macrosociology
475(3)
Back to the Future: Norbert Elias's Figurational Sociology
478(1)
The History of Manners
479(2)
Natural Functions
481(4)
Power and Civility
485(3)
Agency-Structure Integration
488(23)
Major Examples of Agency-Structure Integration
488(1)
Structuration Theory
488(5)
Habitus and Field
493(7)
Applying Habitus and Field
500(3)
Practice Theory
503(2)
Colonization of the Life-World
505(5)
Major Differences in the Agency-Structure Literature
510(1)
Agency-Structure and Micro-Macro Linkages: Fundamental Differences
511(4)
PART III FROM MODERN TO POSTMODERN SOCIAL THEORY (AND BEYOND)
515(174)
Chapter 14 Contemporary Theories of Modernity
516(31)
Classical Theorists on Modernity
516(2)
The Juggernaut of Modernity
518(7)
Modernity and Its Consequences
520(3)
Modernity and Identity
523(1)
Modernity and Intimacy
524(1)
The Risk Society
525(2)
Creating the Risks
526(1)
Coping With the Risks
526(1)
The Holocaust and Liquid Modernity
527(5)
A Product of Modernity
528(1)
The Role of Bureaucracy
528(1)
The Holocaust and Rationalization
529(2)
Liquid Modernity
531(1)
Modernity's Unfinished Project
532(5)
Habermas Versus Postmodernists
534(3)
Self, Society, and Religion
537(5)
Modernity and the Self
537(2)
Modernity's Social Imaginary
539(1)
Religion in a Secular Age
540(2)
Informationalism and the Network Society
542(5)
Chapter 15 Structuralism, Poststructuralism, and Postmodern Social Theory
547(40)
Structuralism
548(3)
Roots in Linguistics
549(1)
Anthropological Structuralism: Claude Levi-Strauss
549(1)
Structural Marxism
550(1)
Poststructuralism
551(22)
The Ideas of Michel Foucault
553(3)
Madness and Civilization
556(2)
The Birth of the Clinic
558(1)
Discipline and Punish
559(1)
The History of Sexuality
560(2)
The Ideas of Giorgio Agamben
562(1)
Basic Concepts
563(2)
Auschwitz and the Camp
565(1)
Biopolitics and the Influence of the Work of Foucault
566(1)
Agamben's Grand Narrative and Ultimate Goals
567(1)
Queer Theory
568(2)
The Heterosexual/Homosexual Binary
570(1)
Performing Sex
571(2)
Postmodern Social Theory
573(10)
Moderate Postmodern Social Theory: Fredric Jameson
577(4)
Extreme Postmodern Social Theory: Jean Baudrillard
581(2)
Criticisms
583(4)
Chapter 16 Theories of Race and Colonialism
587(31)
Fanon and the Colonial Subject
588(7)
Black Skin, White Masks
589(1)
Resistance
590(1)
The Wretched of the Earth
591(2)
Violence
593(1)
Fanon and Marx
593(2)
Postcolonial Theory
595(3)
Orientalism
596(2)
Critical Theories of Race and Racism
598(4)
Racial Formation
602(3)
Racialization
603(1)
Racial Projects
604(1)
Color-Blind Racism
604(1)
A Systematic Theory of Race
605(4)
The Structure of the Racial Field
606(2)
Structure and Agency in the Racial Field
608(1)
Southern Theory and Indigenous Resurgence
609(9)
Southern Theory
609(2)
Indigenous Resurgence
611(1)
Glen Coulthard
611(2)
Leanne Simpson
613(5)
Chapter 17 Globalization Theory
618(34)
Major Contemporary Theorists on Globalization
620(3)
Anthony Giddens on the "Runaway World" of Globalization
620(1)
Ulrich Beck, the Politics of Globalization, and Cosmopolitanism
621(1)
Zygmunt Bauman on the Human Consequences of Globalization
622(1)
Cultural Theory
623(12)
Cultural Differentialism
624(3)
Cultural Convergence
627(1)
"McDonaldization"
628(1)
McDonaldization, Expansionism, and Globalization
629(1)
The "Globalization of Nothing"
630(2)
Cultural Hybridization
632(2)
Appadurai's "Landscapes"
634(1)
Economic Theory
635(7)
Transnational Capitalism
635(2)
Empire
637(2)
Global Cities and Expulsions
639(3)
Political Theory
642(2)
Neoliberalism
644(8)
Critiquing Neoliberalism
648(1)
The Early Thinking of Karl Polanyi
648(1)
(Morel Contemporary Criticisms of Neoliberalism
649(1)
The Death of Neoliberalism?
649(3)
Chapter 18 Science, Technology, and Nature
652(37)
Affect Theory
654(5)
Nonconscious Processes
655(1)
The Affective Field
656(1)
The Ethics and Politics of Affect
657(2)
Science Studies and Actor-Network Theory
659(10)
ANT and Society
661(1)
Translation, Mediation and the Modern Constitution
662(2)
An Example: Pasteur's Microbes
664(1)
Haraway's Hybrids
665(1)
Cyborgs
666(1)
Companions
667(2)
Theories of the Anthropocene
669(12)
Time and the Anthropocene
670(2)
Naming the Anthropocene
672(1)
Chthulucene and Symbiogenesis
673(2)
Capitalism and the Anthropocene
675(1)
Foss/7 Capital
676(1)
Cheap Nature
677(2)
The Earthbound
679(2)
Consumption and Prosumption Theory
681(8)
The New Means of Prosumption
683(1)
Prosumer Capitalism
684(5)
References 689(76)
Name Index 765(17)
Subject Index 782