John Wiley & Sons Sociology Cover The fourth edition of this best-selling introductory reader has been thoroughly revised and updated .. Product #: 978-1-5095-4912-2 Regular price: $74.67 $74.67 Auf Lager

Sociology

Introductory Readings

Giddens, Anthony / Sutton, Philip W. (Herausgeber)

Cover

4. Auflage Januar 2022
360 Seiten, Hardcover
Lehrbuch

ISBN: 978-1-5095-4912-2
John Wiley & Sons

Kurzbeschreibung

The fourth edition of this best-selling introductory reader has been thoroughly revised and updated to offer a stimulating and wide-ranging set of readings for anyone who wishes to engage with the scope of sociological thought and practice today.

The book delivers a productive mix of classic, contemporary and provocative readings that are highly readable and lively, while retaining their critical bite. Ideal as a companion to the ninth edition of Giddens and Sutton's Sociology, the reader can equally be used independently or alongside other textbooks.

Readings are grouped around ten key sociological themes, with a sustained emphasis on comparative, globally and historically informed work. The carefully curated collection ranges from studies of face-to-face interaction through to the analysis of large-scale global systems, covering both the theory and the practice of sociology. Among the new selections in this volume are readings on the decolonial turn; the persistence of racism and its consequences; global health issues and the social impact of COVID-19; digital sociology and the digitization of social life; feminist research and shifting forms of misogyny; climate change and the emerging Anthropocene era; income and wealth inequalities, national populist movements and the spread of 'fake news'. Each of the thematic sections is preceded by a discussion and followed by further reading to facilitate students' comprehension and critical reflection.

The result is an exciting new companion that encompasses the major themes and debates in both classical and contemporary sociology. Sociology: Introductory Readings will be an essential resource for all students of sociology.

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The fourth edition of this best-selling introductory reader has been thoroughly revised and updated to offer a stimulating and wide-ranging set of readings for anyone who wishes to engage with the scope of sociological thought and practice today.

The book delivers a productive mix of classic, contemporary and provocative readings that are highly readable and lively, while retaining their critical bite. Ideal as a companion to the ninth edition of Giddens and Sutton's Sociology, the reader can equally be used independently or alongside other textbooks.

Readings are grouped around ten key sociological themes, with a sustained emphasis on comparative, globally and historically informed work. The carefully curated collection ranges from studies of face-to-face interaction through to the analysis of large-scale global systems, covering both the theory and the practice of sociology. Among the new selections in this volume are readings on the decolonial turn; the persistence of racism and its consequences; global health issues and the social impact of COVID-19; digital sociology and the digitization of social life; feminist research and shifting forms of misogyny; climate change and the emerging Anthropocene era; income and wealth inequalities, national populist movements and the spread of 'fake news'. Each of the thematic sections is preceded by a discussion and followed by further reading to facilitate students' comprehension and critical reflection.

The result is an exciting new companion that encompasses the major themes and debates in both classical and contemporary sociology. Sociology: Introductory Readings will be an essential resource for all students of sociology.

Introduction: The Sociological Perspective

1. Sociology as the Science of Social Life - W.E.B. Du Bois

2. The Promise of Sociology - C. Wright Mills

3. Sociology as the Study of Figurations: Beyond Individual and Society? - Norbert Elias

4. Decolonizing Sociology - Raewyn Connell

5. Understanding Ourselves and Others - Zygmunt Bauman & Tim May

Further Reading


PART 1 Thinking Sociologically

6. The Capitalist Revolution - Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels

7. Tastes, Distinctions and Social Structure - Pierre Bourdieu

8. Learning from the Outsiders Within - Patricia Hill Collins

9. The Consequences of Modernity - Anthony Giddens

10. Sociology after the Postcolonial Turn - Gurminder K. Bhambra

Further Reading


PART 2 Doing Sociology

11. Treat Social Facts as Things - Émile Durkheim

12. Sociology's Historical Imagination - Philip Abrams

13. Mixing Methods in Empirical Research - Emma Pullen, Daniel Jackson & Michael Silk

14. Digital Sociology: Opportunities and Dangers - Noortje Marres

15. What is Feminist Research? - Patricia Leavy & Anne Harris

Further Reading


PART 3 Environment and Urbanism

16. The Metropolis and Mental Life - Georg Simmel

17. A Sociology of Climate Change - John Urry

18. Navigating the 'White Space' - Elijah Anderson

19. Urban Transitions in the Global South - AbdouMaliq Simone & Edgar Pieterse

20. Entering an Anthropocene Era? - Rolf Lidskog & Claire Waterton

Further Reading


PART 4 Structures of Society

21. Religion and the Origins of Capitalism - Max Weber

22. The Feminization of Work - Teri L. Caraway

23. Families and Personal Life - Deborah Chambers & Pablo Gracia

24. Schools: Challenging or Reproducing Social Inequalities? - Christy Kulz

25. Capitalism and the Digital Revolution - Shoshana Zuboff

Further Reading


PART 5 Social Inequalities

26. Intersectionality: Structural and Political - Kimberlé Crenshaw

27. Producing Disability and Abledness - Fiona Kumari Campbell

28. Wealth Concentration and Inequality - Thomas Piketty

29. Racial Distinctions and Social Structures - Michael Banton

30. 'Doing Gender' via Domestic Labour - Clare Lyonette & Rosemary Crompton

Further Reading


PART 6 Relationships and the Life Course

31. I, Me and the Social Self - George Herbert Mead

32. Towards a Sociology of Personal Life - Carol Smart

33. Love as a Sociological Problem - Eva Illouz

34. From the Life Cycle to the Life Course - Stephen J. Hunt

35. The Significance of Generational Experience - Lorraine Green

Further Reading


PART 7 Interaction and Communication

36. Self Presentation and Impression Management - Erving Goffman

37. Violence in Sociological Perspective - Randall Collins

38. Misogyny, Beauty and Body Modification - Sheila Jeffreys

39. Constructing and Negotiating Social Identity - Susie Scott

40. Knowledge Production in a Post-Truth World - Dominic Malcolm

Further Reading


PART 8 Health, Illness and the Body

41. The Medical Re-definition of Social Life - Peter Conrad

42. Does Inequality Cause Poor Health Outcomes? - Richard Wilkinson & Kate Pickett

43. Challenging the Dominance of Biomedicine - Sarah Nettleton

44. Health and Illness in Sociological Perspective - William C. Cockerham

45. The Exceptional and the Normal After COVID-19 - Jens O. Zinn

Further Reading


PART 9 Crime and Social Control

46. The Social Construction of Outsiders - Howard S. Becker

47. The Shifting Politics of Punishment - David Garland

48. Race, Blackness and Exclusion in the USA - Loïc Wacquant

49. The Digital Transformation of Criminality - David S. Wall

50. Back to the Future: The Return of Banishment - Katherine Beckett & Steve Herbert

Further Reading


PART 10 Political Sociology

51. Conceptualizing Power in Sociological Theory - Steven Lukes

52. Ethnic Cleansing and the Dark Side of Democracy - Michael Mann

53. Populist Politics and Mobilization - Bart Bonikowski

54. Representations of British Muslims During the Covid-19 Pandemic - Elizabeth Poole & Milly Williamson

55. Social Media Use in Black Lives Matter Activism - Marcia Mundt, Karen Ross & Charla M. Burnett Further Reading
Anthony Giddens is the former Director of the London School of Economics and Political Science and is now a member of the UK House of Lords.
Philip W. Sutton is an independent researcher, formerly of the University of Leeds and Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen.

A. Giddens, London School of Economics and Political Science; P. W. Sutton, Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen