The structure of sociological theory:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Belmont, Calif.
Wadsworth
c 1991
|
Ausgabe: | 5. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XX, 661 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 053413842X |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The structure of sociological theory |c Jonathan H. Turner |
250 | |a 5. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Belmont, Calif. |b Wadsworth |c c 1991 | |
300 | |a XX, 661 S. |b graph. Darst. | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS
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chapter 1 Sociological Theory:
Diversity and Disagreement 1
Sociology and Science 1
The Elements of Theory 4 Concepts: The Basic Building Blocks
of Theory 4 Variables as an Important Type of Concept 6 Theo-
retical Statements and Formats 7 Meta-theoretical schemes 8 An-
alytical schemes 9 Propositional schemes 11 Modeling schemes 15
An Assessment of Theoretical Approaches 21 Abstractness and
Scope of Various Theoretical Schemes 21 Relative Merits of Diverse
Theoretical Approaches 22
The State of Sociological Theory 27 Prevailing Theoretical
Schemes in Sociology 27 Enduring Controversies in Sociological
Theorizing 28 Can sociology be a science? 28 Should sociological
theory be micro or macro? 28 Is sociology a paradigmatic science? 29
Theoretical Perspectives in Sociology 29
PART ONE
FUNCTIONAL THEORIZING 31
chapter 2 The Emergence of Functionalism 33
Functionalism and the Organismic Analogy 33 The Organicism
of Auguste Comte 34 The Analytical Functionalism of Herbert
Spencer 37
Functionalism and Emile Durkheim 40
Functionalism and the Anthropological Tradition 42 The
Functionalism of A. R. Radcliife-Brown 43 The Functionalism of
Bronislaw Malinowski 45
Functionalism and the Ghost of Max Weber 47
The Emergence of Functionalism: An Overview 48
X
CONTENTS
chapter 3 Analytical Functionalism:
Talcott Parsons 51
The Structure of Social Action 52
The Social System 56
The Transition to Functional Imperativism 62
The Informational Hierarchy of Control 63
Generalized Media of Exchange 65
Parsons on Social Change 67
Parsons on “The Human Condition” 69
Criticisms of Parsonian Functionalism 71 Criticisms of Par-
sons’ Substantive Image of Society 71 The Logical Criticisms of Req-
uisite Functionalism 72
Talcott Parsons: An Overview 77
chapter 4 Empirical Functionalism:
Robert K. Merton 79
Theories of the Middle Range 79
Merton’s Paradigm for Functional Analysis 82 The Functional
Unity Postulate 82 The Issue of Functional Universality 83 The
Issue of Indispensability 83
A Protocol for Executing Functional Analysis 85
Illustrating Merton’s Functional Strategy 87
chapter 5 Neofunctionalsim: Niklas Luhmann 93
Luhmann’s “General Systems” Approach 94 System and
Environment 94 Dimensions of the Environment 95 Types of So-
cial Systems 96 Interaction systems 96 Organization systems 96
Societal systems 97 System Differentiation, Integration, and
Conflict 97 Communications Media, Reflexivity, and Self-
Thematization 100 Communication and codes 100 Communica-
tions media 100 Reflexivity and self-thematization 101 Luhmann’s
Basic Approach 102
Luhmann’s Conception of Social Evolution 102 The Underly-
ing Mechanisms of Evolution 103 Evolution and Social
Differentiation 104
CONTENTS
xi
The Functional Differentiation of Society 107 Politics as a So-
cial System 107 The Autonomy of the Legal System 110 The
Economy as a Social System 111
An Assessment of Luhmann’s Neofunctionalism 113
chapter 6 General Systems Functionalism 116
Early Systems Approaches 116
General Systems Theory 117
Basic Concepts of Systems Theory 119 Energy, Matter, and
Information 119 Entropy and Negative Entropy 119 Organization
and System 120 Open and Closed Systems 120 Cybernetic
Systems 120 System Levels 121
Living Systems: James G. Miller s Analysis 122
Conclusion 129
chapter 7 Ecological Functionalism:
Amos H· Hawley 131
Origins of the Ecological Perspective 131
Amos H. Hawley s Human Ecology Perspective 136 Produc-
tion, Transportation, and Communication 136 The Environment 138
The Functionalism in Human Ecology 140 Equilibrium and
Change 142 Growth and Evolution 144
Conclusion 150
chapter 8 Biological Functionalism:
* Pierre van den Berghe 152
The Sociobiological Challenge 152
The Origins of Sociobiology 153 Herbert Spencer and Biological
Sociology 153 Charles Darwin and Natural Selection 154 The Ge-
netic Theory of Natural Selection 156 The genetics of the
individual 156 The genetics of the population 157
The Emergence and Codification of Sociobiology 159 The
First True Sociobiologists 160 Early instinct theories 160 Func-
tional sociobiology 161
Why Is Sociobiology Functional? 165
A Sociobiological Approach to Biological Functionalism: Pierre
van den Berghe 167 The Early Biosocial Instinct Approach 168
xii
CONTENTS
The Switch to Biological Functionalism 169 Criticisms of
sociology 169 Conceptualizing sociobiological processes 171
Conceptualizing cultural processes 174 Explanations of social phe֊
nomena with sociobiology 175
Sociobiology: A Concluding Comment 177
PART TWO
CONFLICT THEORIZING 179
chapter 9 The Origins of Conflict and
Critical Theorizing 181
The Conflict Alternative 181
Karl Marx and the Origins of Conflict and Critical Theory 184
Critical Strains in Marx’s Thought 184 Positivistic Strains in Marx’s
Thought 185
Georg Simmel and Conflict Theorizing 189 Functional Strains
in SimmePs Thought 189 Simmel’s Implicit Attack on Marx’s Eman-
cipatory Project 195
Max Weber’s Theory of Conflict 196 Positivistic Strains in We-
ber’s Thought 196 Weber’s Pessimism and the Dilemma for the
Emancipation Project of Critical Theories 200
The Proliferation of Conflict Sociology 202
chapter 10 Dialectical Conflict Theory:
Ralf Dahrendorf 203
Ritualized Criticism of Functionalism 203
Dahrendorf’s Image of the Social Order 204
Criticisms of the Dialectical Conflict Model 208 Problems in
the Causal Analysis 208 Methodological Problems 212
From Utopia to Where? A Concluding Comment 213
chapter 11 Conflict Functionalism:
Lewis A. Coser 216
The Standardized Critique 216
Images of Social Organization 217
CONTENTS
xiii
Propositions on Conflict Processes 219 The Causes of
Conflict 219 The Violence of Conflict 221 The Duration of
Conflict 222 The Functions of Social Conflict 223
Coser’s Functional Approach: An Assessment 226
chapter 12 Exchange Conflict Theory:
Randall Collins 228
The Critique of Macrostructural Analysis 229
Interaction Ritual Chains 232 The Nature of Rituals 232 The
Underlying Exchange Dynamic 234
Micro and Macro Linkages 239
Conflict Sociology 240 Talk and Ritual 241 Deference and
Demeanor 243 Class Cultures 244 Sexual Stratification 246 Age
Stratification 247 Organizational Processes 248 The State and
Economy 248 Geopolitics 250
Conclusion 251
chapter 13 Critical Theorizing:
Jurgen Habermas 254
Early Critical Theory: Lukács, Horkheimer, Adorno 256
The Critical Approach of Jurgen Habermas 258 The Central
Problem of Critical Theory 259 Habermas’ Analysis of “The Public
Sphere” 260 The Critique of Science 261 Legitimation Crises in
Society 263 Early Analyses of Speech and Interaction 265 Haber-
mas’ Reconceptualization of Social Evolution 268 The Theory of
Communicative Action 270
An Assessment of Habermas’ Critical Theory and Project 277
Evaluating Habermas’ Conception of Action 277 Habermas’ Concep-
tion of Interaction 278 Habermas’ Macrosociology: System and
Lifeworld 278 Habermas’ View of Evolution 280
PART THREE
EXCHANGE THEORIZING 283
chapter 14 Early Forms of Exchange Theorizing
285
Utilitarianism: The Legacy of Classical Economics 285
Exchange Theory in Anthropology 287 Sir James Frazer 287
Bronislaw Malinowski and Nonmaterial Exchange 289 Marcel Mauss
xiw
CONTENTS
and the Emergence of Exchange Structuralism 290 Claude Lévi-
Strauss and Structuralism 292
Psychological Behaviorism and Exchange Theory 294
The Sociological Tradition and Exchange Theory 297 Marx’s
Theory of Exchange and Conflict 298 Georg Simmel’s Exchange
Theory 299
Modern Exchange Theory: A Preview 301
chapter 15 Exchange Behaviorism:
George C. Homans 303
The Early Inductive Strategy 304
The Addition of a Deductive Strategy 308
The Exchange Model 309 Sources of Homans’ Psychological Ex-
change Perspective 309 The Basic Concepts 311 Elementary Prin-
ciples of Social Behavior 312 Homans’ Construction of Deductive
Systems 314
Criticisms of Homans’ Strategy and Exchange Theory 317
The Issue of Rationality 317 The Issue of Tautology 318 The Is-
sue of Reductionism 319
Homans’ Image of Society 322
chapter 16 Structural Exchange Theory:
Peter M. Blau 328
Blau’s Theoretical Strategy 328
Basic Exchange Principles 330
Basic Exchange Processes in Social Life 333 Elementary Sys-
tems of Exchange 333 Exchange Systems and Macrostructure 340
The Organizational Basis of Society 346
The Unresolved Issue: Micro- versus Macroanalysis 350
chapter 17 Rational Choice Theory:
Michael Hechter 352
The Sociological Revival of Utilitarianism 352
Hechter’s Rational Choice Theory of Group Solidarity 354
The Critique of “Emergent Property” Theories 355 Basic Concepts
in Rational Choice Theories 355 The Basis of Social Control: Depen-
dence, Monitoring, and Sanctioning 357 Types of Groups 358 Pat-
CONTENTS
XV
terns of Control in Compensatory and Obligatory Groups 361 The
Theory Summarized 363 Macrostructural Implications 363
Conclusion 365
PART FOUR
INTERACTIONIST THEORIZING 367
chapter 18 Early Interactionism and Phenomenology
369
Early American Insights 369 William James and the Concept of
“Self” 370 Self and Social Process: Charles Horton Cooley 370
Pragmatism and Thinking: The Contribution of John Dewey 371
Main Currents of Thought in America: Pragmatism, Darwinism, and
Behaviorism 372 George Herbert Mead’s Synthesis 373 Concep-
tualizing Structure and Role 377 Robert Park and Role Theory 377
Jacob Moreno and Role Theory 378 Ralph Linton and Role
Theory 379
Early European Insights 379 Georg Simmel and “Sociation” 380
Émile Durkheim’s Metamorphosis 381 Max Weber and “Social
Action” 382 European Phenomenology 382 Edmund Husserl’s
project 383 The phenomenological interactionism of Alfred
Schütz 385
Modern Interactionism: A Review 389
chapter 19 Symbolic Interactionism:
Herbert Blumer and Manford Kuhn 391
Symbolic Interactionism: Points of Convergence 392 Humans
as Symbol Users 392 Symbolic Communication 393 Interaction
and Role Taking 393 Interaction, Humans, and Society 393
Areas of Disagreement and Controversy 394 The Nature of
the Individual 395 The Nature of Interaction 396 The Nature of
Social Organization 397 The Nature of Methods 398 The Nature
and Possibilities of Sociological Theory 403 The Chicago and Iowa
Schools: An Overview 405
Symbolic Interactionism: A Concluding Comment 408
chapter 20 Structural Role Theory 410
The Conceptual Thrust of Structural Role Theory 411
Images of Society and the Individual 411 The Nature of Social
Organization 412 Expectations from the script 412 Expectations
xvi
CONTENTS
from other players 413 Expectations from the audience 413 The
Nature of the Individual 414 The Articulation between the Individual
and Society 415 Prescribed roles 415 Subjective roles 415 En-
acted roles 416
Problems and Issues in Building Role Theory 419 Construct-
ing Propositions 419 Methodological Implications 420
chapter 21 Process Role Theory:
Ralph H. Turner 425
The Critique of Structural Theory 425
Interaction and Roles 427 The Role-Making Process 427 The
uFolk Norm of Consistency” 427 The Tentative Nature of
Interaction 428 The Process of Role Verification 428 Self-Concep-
tions and Role 428
The Strategy for Building Role Theory 430 The Concepts of
Role Theory 430 Sorting Out Tendencies 430 Generating and Or-
ganizing Empirical Propositions 434 Developing Explanatory
Propositions 438 Functionality 439 Representation 441
Tenability 443
Process Role Theory: A Brief Assessment of Turner s
Approach 445
chapter 22 Dramaturgical Theory:
Erving Goffman 447
The Interaction Order 447
The Dramaturgical Metaphor 449
The Presentation of Self 450
Focused Interaction 453 Encounters 454 Ritual 456
Roles 457 Self 458 Talk 460 Disruption and Repair in Focused
Interaction 463
Unfocused Interaction 464
Frames and the Organization of Experience 466 What Is a
Frame? 467 Primary Frames 468 Keys and Keying 469
Fabrications 469 The Complexity of Experience 470
Conclusion 471
chapter 23 The Ethnomethodological Challenge 472
The Origins of Ethnomethodology 473 Blumer’s Interactionism
and Ethnomethodology 473 Goffman’s Dramaturgical Analysis and
CONTENTS
xvii
Ethnomethodology 474 Alfred Schütz, Phenomenology, and
Ethnomethodology 474
The Nature of Ethnomethodology 475 Metaphysics or Method-
ology? 475 Concepts and Principles of Ethnomethodology 477 Va-
rieties of Ethnomethodological Inquiry 480
New Paradigm or Important Supplement? 485
PART FIVE
STRUCTURAL THEORIZING 487
chapter 24 The Origins of Structural Theorizing
489
The Idea of Social Structure 489
Karl Marx and Structural Analysis 490
The Structuralism of Émile Durkheim 491
The Structuralism of Claude Lévi-Strauss 493
Georg SimmePs Formal Approach 495
Interactionism and Microstructuralism 497 G. H* Mead’s Be-
havioristic Structuralism 497 Alfred Schütz 498
Modern Structural Analysis 498
chapter 25 Cultural Structuralism: Robert Wuthnow
and Pierre Bourdieu 500
Modern Structuralism 500
Cultural Analysis: Robert Wuthnow 501 Cultural Structure,
Ritual, and Institutional Context 502 The Moral Order 503 The
structure of moral codes 503 The nature of ritual 504 Institutional
context 504 Ideology 505 The Dynamics of the Moral Order 505
Constructivist Structuralism: Pierre Bourdieu 508 Criticisms
of Existing Theories 508 The critique of structuralism 508 The
critique of interactionism and phenomenology 509 The critique of
utilitarianism 510 Bourdieu’s Cultural Conflict Theory 512 Classes
and capital 512 Class cultures and habitus 516
Conclusion 518
xviii
CONTENTS
chapter 26 Structuration Theory:
Anthony Giddens 519
The Critique of Social Theory 519 Rejecting Naturalism and
Positivism 529 Obviating Sociological Dualisms 520 The Critique
of Functionalism and Evolutionism 521 The Limits of
Interactionism 522 The Critique of Structuralism 522
The “Theory of Structuration” 523 Reconceptualizing Structure
and Social System 523 Reconceptualizing Institutions 527 Struc-
tural Principles, Sets, and Properties 528 Structural
Contradiction 529 Agents, Agency, and Action 530 Routinization
and Regionalization of Interaction 533 Routines 533
Regionalization 535
Structuration Theory: A Summary and Assessment 535
chapter 27 Network Analysis 540
The Diverse Origins of Network Sociology 541 Jacob Moreno
and Sociometrie Techniques 541 Studies of Communications in
Groups: Alex Bavelas and Harold Leavitt 542 Early Gestalt and Bal-
ance Approaches: Heider, Newcomb, Cartwright and Harary 544 S. F.
Nadei and Anthropological Influences on Network Analysis 547
Basic Theoretical Concepts in Network Analysis 549 Points
and Nodes: Persons, Positions, and Actors 549 Links, Ties,
Connections 550 Patterns and Configurations of Ties 551 Number
of ties 551 Directedness 551 Reciprocity of ties 551 Transitivity
of ties 552 Density of ties 552 Strength of ties 553 Bridges 554
Brokerage 554 Centrality 554 Equivalence 555
The Theoretical Potential of Network Sociology 557
Exchange Theory and Network Analysis: The Emerson-Cook
Program 558 The Overall Strategy 559 The Basic Exchange
Concepts 560 The Basic Exchange Processes 562 The Basic Ex-
change Propositions 563 Structure, Networks, and Exchange 563
Conclusion 571
chapter 28 Macrostructural Theory:
Peter M. Blau 573
Blau’s Theoretical Strategy 573
Blau’s Theory of Macrostructure 578
Macrostructuralism: An Assessment 581
CONTENTS
xix
PART SIX
ASSESSMENT AND SYNTHESIS OF
SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY 583
chapter 29 Approaching Theoretical Synthesis 585
Believing in Science 585
On the Shoulders of Giants 586
Domains of Theorizing 587 Micro Theorizing 587 Macro
Theorizing 588 Meso Theorizing 588
Conclusion 590
CHAPTER 30 Micro Theorizing 592
The Micro Universe 592
Motivating Processes 592 The Concept of “Needs” 593 An In-
ventory of Interactive Need-States 594 Needs for the group 594
Needs for self-confirmation 594 Needs for symbols and materials 595
Needs for facticity 595 Needs for ontological security 596 The Dy-
namics of Motivation 596
Interacting Processes 597 The Cognitive Basis of Signaling and
Interpreting 597 The Self-Referencing Basis of Signaling and
Interpreting 598 Types of Signaling and Gesturing 598 Role taking
and role making 598 Framing 599 Staging 600 Ritualizing 600
Claiming 600 Accounting 601
Structuring Processes 602 Avoiding Micro Chauvinism 602
Types of Microstructuring Dynamics 602 Categorization 602
Regionalization 603 Normatization 603 Ritiialization 604
Routinization 604 Stabilization of resource transfers 605
Conclusion 606
chapter 31 Macro Theorizing 607
The Macro Universe 607
Assembling Processes 608 Aggregation 608 Size and
Growth 609 Production 609
Differentiating Processes 610 Competition and Conflict 610
Subcategories 611 Subgroupings and Subpopulations 612
Subrankings 612 Subcultures 613 Exchange of Resources 613
Mobilization of Power 614
Integrating Processes 615 Disintegrative Processes 616
XX
CONTENTS
Problems of coordination 616 Problems of symbolic unification 617
Problems of political consolidation 617 Selection Pressures and Social
Integration 618 Integration through Structural Coordination 620
Structural interdependence 620 Structural inclusion 620 Struc-
tural overlap 621 Other coordinating processes 621 Integration
through Symbolic Unification 621 Evaluational symbols 622 Defi-
nitional symbols 622 Regulatory symbols 623 Symbolic media 623
Other symbolically unifying processes 623 Integration through Politi-
cal Consolidation 624 Centralization of power 624 Concentration
of power 625 Legitimation of power 626 The Dynamics of
Integration 626
Conclusion 627
CHAPTER 32 Meso Theorizing 628
The Micro/Macro “Gap” 628
Strategies for “Meso” Analysts 628 Constructing Theories of
the “Middle Range” 628 Building Conceptual Staircases 631
Erecting Deductive Reductions 632 Searching for Formal
Isomorphisms 633 Positioning Intermediate Units 635 Conceptual-
izing Mutual Parameters 636
Conclusion 638
Author Index 641
Subject Index
647
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Turner, Jonathan H. 1942- |
author_GND | (DE-588)132798573 |
author_facet | Turner, Jonathan H. 1942- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Turner, Jonathan H. 1942- |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV004647221 |
callnumber-first | H - Social Science |
callnumber-label | HM24 |
callnumber-raw | HM24 |
callnumber-search | HM24 |
callnumber-sort | HM 224 |
callnumber-subject | HM - Sociology |
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ctrlnum | (OCoLC)21079474 (DE-599)BVBBV004647221 |
dewey-full | 301 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 301 - Sociology and anthropology |
dewey-raw | 301 |
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dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Soziologie |
edition | 5. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Einführung |
id | DE-604.BV004647221 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T16:15:30Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 053413842X |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-002853892 |
oclc_num | 21079474 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-91G DE-BY-TUM DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-91G DE-BY-TUM DE-11 |
physical | XX, 661 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 1991 |
publishDateSearch | 1991 |
publishDateSort | 1991 |
publisher | Wadsworth |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Turner, Jonathan H. 1942- Verfasser (DE-588)132798573 aut The structure of sociological theory Jonathan H. Turner 5. ed. Belmont, Calif. Wadsworth c 1991 XX, 661 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Sociologie Sociologie gtt Theorieën gtt Soziologie Sociology Soziologische Theorie (DE-588)4077628-1 gnd rswk-swf Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 gnd rswk-swf Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content Soziologische Theorie (DE-588)4077628-1 s DE-604 Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 s 1\p DE-604 Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 s 2\p DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Bamberg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=002853892&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Turner, Jonathan H. 1942- The structure of sociological theory Sociologie Sociologie gtt Theorieën gtt Soziologie Sociology Soziologische Theorie (DE-588)4077628-1 gnd Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 gnd Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4077628-1 (DE-588)4077624-4 (DE-588)4059787-8 (DE-588)4151278-9 |
title | The structure of sociological theory |
title_auth | The structure of sociological theory |
title_exact_search | The structure of sociological theory |
title_full | The structure of sociological theory Jonathan H. Turner |
title_fullStr | The structure of sociological theory Jonathan H. Turner |
title_full_unstemmed | The structure of sociological theory Jonathan H. Turner |
title_short | The structure of sociological theory |
title_sort | the structure of sociological theory |
topic | Sociologie Sociologie gtt Theorieën gtt Soziologie Sociology Soziologische Theorie (DE-588)4077628-1 gnd Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 gnd Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Sociologie Theorieën Soziologie Sociology Soziologische Theorie Theorie Einführung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=002853892&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT turnerjonathanh thestructureofsociologicaltheory |