Introductory sociology:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Basingstoke [u.a.]
Palgrave Macmillan
2002
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Ausgabe: | 4. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXXIII, 596 S. zahlr. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 0333945719 0333945727 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804129078235627520 |
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adam_text | Detailed Contents vii
List of Boxes xix
List of Tables xxiii
List of Charts xxv
List of Figures xxvii
Preface xxix
Using this book xxxi
Acknowledgements xxxiii
part I ^£~ Introduction: Studying Modern Society 1
1 Studying Society Today 2
2 Living in Modernity 22
3 Globalisation and Modernity 1*1*
part 2. $*£ Social Divisions and Power 67
I* Social Divisions 68
5 Social Class 96
6 Gender Relations 128
7 Race and Ethnicity 160
8 Power, Politics and the State 192
part 3 £ Dimensions of Modern Social Life 227
9 Family Life 228
10 Education 262
11 Work and Non Work 298
12 Mass Media 328
V
vi y^r BRIEF CONTENTS
13 Health, Illness and Medicine 354
14 Crime 380
15 Knowledge, Religion and Belief 410
part H ^ £. Sociological Theory and Method 439
16 Principles of Sociological Research 440
17 Classical Social Theory, Feminism and Modernity 466
18 Making Social Life: Theories of Action and Meaning 496
19 Modernity, Postmodernity and Social Theory 514
Glossary 539
Bibliography 551
Copyright Acknowledgements 571
Author Index 575
Subject Index 581
List of Boxes xix
List of Tables xxiii
List of Charts xxv
List of Figures xxvii
Preface xxix
Using this book xxxi
Acknowledgements xxxiii
part I ^; $ Introduction: Studying Modern Society 1
1 Studying Society Today 2
The puzzle of social life A
Living in society 6
Making sense of society 7
Example: parents and children 7
Rationality, trust and mad cows 8
Reflexive sociology 12
Society and the subject: individuals in social contexts 13
Biological, psychological and ecological influences 13
Social influences on human life 14
Playing by the rules: norms, values and social constraints 15
The subject and society: creative social action 16
We think, therefore we are : conscious actors, creativity and agency 16
Others think like us too : identity, the self and interaction 17
Humans as creations and creators: the duality of structure and agency 18
Opportunities and limits: social life as enabling and constraining 19
vii
viii y^ INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY
Conclusion 19
Chapter summary 20
2 Living in Modernity 22
Introduction 24
The origins of modernity 24
The process of becoming modern: transformations of time and space 26
Living with industrial capitalism 27
Living as a worker 27
Living as a consumer 29
Living with rationality 30
A new faith? Living with science and technology 32
Living under state government 34
Living in public and private 36
Living in public 37
Being private 39
Living in postmodernity? 40
Chapter summary 41
3 Globalisation and Modernity 44
Introduction 46
Globalisation and modernity 48
The separation of time and space 49
The disembedding of social systems 49
The reflexive ordering of social relations 50
Debating globalisation 52
The hyperglobalists 52
The sceptics 53
The transformationalists 53
The globalisation of production: transnational corporations 54
Implications 56
The globalisation of culture 57
Cultural imperialism 57
Globalisation and political change 60
A new world order? 62
Possible futures 64
Chapter summary 65
DETAILED CONTENTS y^h ix
part Z *£ £ Social Divisions and Power 67
U Social Divisions 68
Introduction 70
The general meaning of social divisions 70
Key socio economic divisions: wealth and poverty 72
Wealth 73
The poor and the underclass 77
Patterns of social exclusion 81
The life course 82
Youth 82
Older people 86
Disability 89
Conclusion 92
Chapter summary 93
5 Social Class 96
Introduction 98
Understanding social class 99
Marx s theory of property relations 99
Weber s theory of market relations 102
Classifying social class 104
The reproduction of social class 105
The middle class 106
The working class 110
Changes in the labour market 112
The restructuring of the economy 114
The polarisation of the labour market 115
The globalisation of production 116
Class reproduction? 118
Implications for social mobility 118
Changes in mobility patterns 119
The continuing significance of social class 121
Conclusion 126
Chapter summary 126
x y^ INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY
6 Gender Relations 128
Introduction 130
Men, women and gender difference 131
Gender and the body 133
Becoming gendered people 136
Creating a gendered society 139
Divisions of labour 141
Feminisation of the labour force 143
Consequences of gender segregated employment 14 6
Childbirth and childcare 148
Popular culture and the mass media 150
Sexuality 153
Chapter summary 157
7 Race and Ethnicity 160
Introduction 162
Inequalities of race: the British example 165
Post war migration: global and local contexts 165
Patterns of inequality 168
Signs of change? 171
Explaining inequalities: practices and structures of exclusion 172
The impact of racism 173
Race, culture and identity 177
The changing character of racialised discourse 177
Race and national identity 179
Cultural change and ethnic absolutism 181
Dynamics of inequality and identity race, class and gender 184
Theorising inequalities of race and class 184
Race and the underclass 185
Challenging the primacy of class 185
Race and gender divisions 186
Complex identities: racism, gender and sexuality 187
Rethinking race, class and gender 188
Chapter summary 189
8 Power, Politics and the State 192
Introduction 194
Rethinking power structures 195
From power structures to power networks? 196
DETAILED CONTENTS Yjfr xi
Classic accounts of power in society 198
Pluralist accounts of the distribution of power 199
Neo pluralism 200
Marxist models of the distribution of power 201
Instrumentalist Marxist models 201
Structuralist Marxist approaches 203
Gramscian Marxist analysis 203
Beyond class politics 206
Class divisions, social divisions, political identities and interests 206
Electoral politics: beyond class alignment? 209
Sectoral cleavages: from class politics to consumption politics? 210
New social cleavages, new social movements 210
The modern state 215
The making of the modern state 216
The democratic state 217
Globalisation, power and democracy 218
Simultaneous integration and fragmentation 219
Global governance 220
Towards a new cosmopolitan democracy? 222
Conclusion: new directions in political sociology 222
Understanding a changing political world 223
Chapter summary 224
part 3 $ £ Dimensions of Modern Social Life 227
9 Family Life 228
Introduction 230
Talcott Parsons: the fit between the nuclear family and industrial society 232
Michel Foucault: discourses and social life 234
Pre modern family life and religious discourses 236
Modern family life and medical discourses 237
Reproductive technologies and the medicalisation of motherhood 238
Family therapy and the medicalisation of marriage 239
The state and family life: the politics of family policy 240
Welfarism, 194 5 79 240
Anti welfarism: the new right, 1979 90 240
Pro natalism 243
Care in the community 243
New Labourwelfarism 244
xii y^ INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY
Thinking about the nuclear family: sociological responses to welfarism 244
Social conservatism: pro welfarism in sociology 245
The liberationist critique of social conservatism 248
Liberationist anti welfarism (1): Marxism and the nuclear family 250
Liberationist anti welfarism (2): radical feminism and the nuclear family 251
Liberationist anti welfarism (3): sexual liberationism 252
Difference and diversity in modern family life 253
Divorce 254
Single parent households 254
Cohabitation 254
Marriage 255
Life cycle or life course? 255
Human agency and the family 256
Postmodern theorising and the family 257
Chapter summary 259
10 Education 262
Introduction 264
Educational policy and educational reform 264
The social context of education 266
A structural functionalist account 267
A conflict account: correspondence theory 268
Education, the state and status groups 269
Status groups and social closure 270
Review 272
Education and economic and social decline in the UK 272
Education, social inequality and difference 273
Educational social differentiation: class, gender and ethnicity 274
Class differences in education 276
Gender differences in education 276
Ethnic differences in education 279
Explaining social difference and educational attainment 281
Extra school explanations: naturalistic and cultural 281
Naturalistic explanations: who s a clever boy, then? 281
Culturalist explanations: who s a pretty boy, then? 283
Intra school explanations: school organisation and school culture 285
Labelling theory and classroom processes 287
Educational differentiation: descriptions and explanations 289
Active and passive pupils: pupil identity, schools, culture and the labour market 290
The active pupil and strategic decision making 291
Credential inflation and the labour market: the macro dimension 292
DETAILED CONTENTS ~Yjf* xiii
Conclusion 294
Chapter summary 296
11 Work and Non Work 298
Introduction 300
The place of work in contemporary society 301
The emergence of the modern concept of work 301
The Labour process 303
The meaning of work and work satisfaction 308
Workers orientations towards work 310
Gender, ethnicity, age, disability and work 311
Gender 311
Ethnicity 313
Age 315
Disability 317
Industrial conflict 318
The future of work 319
Work, non work and leisure 319
The neo Marxist approach 321
The feminist approach 321
The postmodernist approach 322
Popular culture, TV and leisure 324
Conclusion 326
Chapter summary 326
12 Mass Media Uames Stanyer) 328
Introduction 330
Sociological approaches to the study of the mass media 331
The shrinking globe: new communication technologies and interconnectivity 333
An emerging electronic global village 333
The expanding global media market place 334
The global media market and the flow of television programmes 335
Television programme flows: an international one way street or a patchwork quilt? 336
Transnational media corporations 338
Global media content: the impact of the market and state 341
Universal homogeneity and dumbing down 341
Information society versus informed society 342
State control 343
xiv y^r INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY
The worldwide audience: media reception 344
Social actors as an audience 344
Global audiences and media messages 346
The all powerful audience 348
The information gap 348
Conclusion 350
Chapter summary 352
13 Health, Illness and Medicine 354
Introduction: the social basis of health, illness and medicine 356
Theoretical approaches 359
Parsonsian functionalism and the sick role 359
Symbolic interactionism and the social construction of illness 360
Marxist theory 362
Feminist accounts 364
Foucauldian analysis 365
Combining perspectives: Turner s contribution 366
The medical profession and the power of orthodox medicine 367
Health inequalities 373
The contemporary health care system today 374
The globalisation of health, illness and medicine 377
Conclusion 378
Chapter summary 379
U Crime 380
Introduction 382
Modernist criminology 384
Delinquent subculture theories 386
Labelling theory 389
Marxist criminology 392
Left Realism 394
Right Realism 399
Feminist criminology 401
Modernist criminology and the postmodernist critique 405
Conclusion 407
Chapter summary 407
ifot
DETAILED CONTENTS Y^h xv
15 Knowledge, Religion and Belief 410
Introduction 412
Great Divide thinking 412
What is science? 414
Science, rationalism and disenchantment 416
Perspectives on scientific and non scientific knowledge 416
Symbolic anthropology and phenomenology 4 16
Functionalism 417
Rationalism 417
Relativism 418
Theories of secularisation in modern societies 418
Bryan Wilson 419
Ernest Gellner 420
Michel Foucault 421
Bryan Turner 423
Anti secularisation perspectives 423
The co existence of science and non science in pre modernity 4 23
Religion is what religion does (1): knowledge and the search for meaning 425
Religion is what religion does (2): religion, integration and solidarity 427
Scientists are human too: demystifying scientific rationality and objectivity 429
Wishful thinking: non rational thinking in science and magic 429
Science as a social product 431
Relativism 433
Responses to relativism 434
Objections to cognitive relativism 434
Objections to moral relativism 434
Chapter summary 436
part 4 * $ Sociological Theory and Method 439
16 Principles of Sociological Research 440
Introduction 442
Sociological questions 442
Theoretical approaches and research methodologies 446
The survey 4 50
Observation 456
Observation and reliability 459
The case study 460
xvi Y^h INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY
Feminist methodology and the critique of malestream research 461
Postmodernity and research methodology 463
Chapter summary 464
17 Classical Social Theory, Feminism and Modernity 466
Introduction 468
Classical sociological theories 470
Emile Durkheim 470
Durkheim s project: social progress through sociological reason 470
Durkheim s theoretical approach: the importance of moral regulation 470
Modernity as a more sophisticated social order 472
Scientific remedies for social problems 474
Karl Marx 476
Modernity as the emancipation of human potential 476
Alienation: the denial of human creative potential 477
Economic exploitation and class conflict 477
Contradictions within capitalism 479
Criticisms of Marx 481
Max Weber 482
Weber s theory of social action 483
Rationalisation and modernity 484
Feminism, social theory and modernity 487
Feminist theory and classical liberal theory 488
Feminist theory and modern social theory 489
Problems with modern feminist theories 493
Chapter summary 494
18 Making Social Life: Theories of Action and Meaning 496
Introduction 498
Actors and their meanings: varieties of action theory 499
Weber s theory of social action 500
Symbolic mteractionism 501
Phenomenological sociology 504
Ethnomethodology 505
Summary: creative social action 507
Language and social life: post structuralism 509
Chapter summary 511
DETAILED CONTENTS Y^h xvii
19 Modernity, Postmodernity and Social Theory 5U
The challenge of renewing social theory 516
Towards postmodernity? Dimensions of postmodernism 517
Postmodernity: a new phase of capitalist social structure? 518
Postmodernism, language and discourse 522
Social life as language? Structuralism and post structuralism 522
Social life as language? Discourse and reality 524
Feminist theory, postmodernism and post structuralism 527
Feminism and postmodernism 527
Feminism and post structuralism 528
Feminist responses to postmodernism and post structuralism 529
Against Postmodernism 530
Rediscovering the self 531
Habermas and the defence of reason 532
Beck, reflexive modernisation and the risk society 534
Reflexive sociology: renewing the sociological project 535
Chapter summary 536
Glossary 539
Bibliography 551
Copyright Acknowledgements 571
Author Index 575
Subject Index 581
1.1 Durkheim 5
1.2 Marx 10
1.3 Weber 12
1.4 Global hip hop culture: humans as knowledgeable agents 16
1.5 Social structure and human creativity 18
2.1 Working for Ford 28
2.2 Consumption as opposition? 30
2.3 The McDonaldisation of society? 31
2.4 Technological futures: fact and fiction 33
2.5 Modernity and the Holocaust 35
2.6 Public and private worlds: the impact of mass media 38
2.7 Private rituals, public pressures 39
3.1 Changing sociological agendas 47
3.2 From Fordism to global post Fordism 56
3.3 The world s top ten brands 57
4.1 Increasing levels of global wealth and global poverty 75
4.2 Wealth and work in London: the changing context 76
4.3 Educational policy and social disadvantage 80
4.4 First jobs and future life chances 84
4.5 The demographic shift 87
4.6 Towards a sociology of exclusion 89
4.7 Areas of work in the sociology of disability 90
4.8 The medical model of disability 91
5.1 The old and new middle class 106
5.2 Manual workers and changes in the workplace 111
5.3 Different forms of capital 112
5.4 The future of professional work 120
5.5 Problems with the idea of an underclass 120
5.6 The reality of class in the US and UK 123
xix
Y^ INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY
6.1 Gender inequality on a global scale 131
6.2 Ain t I a woman? 133
6.3 Gendering the body 135
6.4 Making babies 149
6.5 Compulsory heterosexuality? 154
6.6 Sex and violence in the courtroom: the impact of the sexual
double standard 155
7.1 Race and science 163
7.2 Problems with terminology 165
7.3 Global migration, 1945 73 166
7.4 Dimensions of racial disadvantage 170
7.5 The limits of racial dualism 172
7.6 Evidence of discrimination 174
7.7 Dimensions of racism: the example of housing 176
7.8 Making the headlines: racism and the press 178
7.9 Building a sense of nationhood: the Sami people of Norway 180
7.10 A dilemma of identity? Mixed descent 181
7.11 The limits of hybridity 183
7.12 Unpacking the fashion industry 187
8.1 Power and the Internet 197
8.2 The third way a new hegemony? 205
8.3 Future values 212
9.1 Functionalism and the family 232
9.2 Nuclear family relationships and identities 232
9.3 The Child Support Act 1991 235
9.4 The New Right perspective on welfarism 241
9.5 The problem with over emphasising the death of the family 246
9.6 The parental deficit 247
9.7 Happy families: a game of charades 248
10.1 Working at closure 271
10.2 Meritocracy in post war Britain 275
10.3 Race, heredity and intelligence 282
10.4 Comprehensive reform 286
10.5 The educational strategies of Afro Caribbean girls 291
11.1 Work, non work and unemployment 320
12.1 AOL/Time Warner 339
12.2 News Corporation 340
12.3 The viewing of Hindi films on video in Southall 348
13.1 The discourse of dying 366
13.2 The medicalisation of pregnancy 369
13.3 Forms of control by orthodox practitioners over competitors 372
13.4 Characterising the US health care system 375
13.5 Health policies and individual risk 377
LIST OF BOXES Y^r xxi
14.1 Crime, gender and age 387
14.2 The delinquent subculture 388
14.3 The application of labels 390
14.4 Selective law enforcement stop and search 390
14.5 Crime and capitalism 393
14.6 Unequal risk of victimisation 396
14.7 Left and Right Realism 399
14.8 Situational contexts of crime 401
14.9 Hidden victims domestic violence against women 404
14.10 Discourses and the criminal justice system 406
15.1 Science, religion and secularisation 419
15.2 The characteristics of a secular society 420
15.3 Ironic cultures and the meaning industry 421
15.4 Property, sexuality and secularisation 423
15.5 Fundamentalism and postmodernity 425
15.6 Scientific thinking and scientific practice 432
16.1 Inheritance and the idea of the home 443
16.2 Some useful statistical sources 451
16.3 Official statistics as a secondary data source 453
16.4 Surveying family life in east London 456
16.5 Touching base validating interpretive observation 459
17.1 Emile Durkheim (1858 1917) 470
17.2 Durkheim and functionalism 471
17.3 Durkheim and positivism 474
17.4 Karl Marx (1818 83) 476
17.5 Max Weber (1864 1920) 482
18.1 Erving Goffman and the politics of interaction: social life as theatre 502
18.2 Ethnomethodologyand the contingency of meaning 507
18.3 The historical relativity of the meaning of language 510
19.1 Culture and knowledge: from early modernity to postmodernity 518
19.2 From economic modernity to postmodernity 521
4.1 Distribution of wealth in the UK, 1976 99 74
4.2 Persons in households with [ess than half the average income 78
6.1 Global divisions of labour: women in the non agricultural
labour force, 2000 144
6.2 Earnings and hours worked by women and men, April 1999 146
6.3 The male earnings advantage around the world, selected countries, 1997 147
6.4 Average hourly earnings of full time employees, UK, 1998/9 148
6.5 Predominance of men in the world s media, 2000 152
7.1 Percentage of British population drawn from ethnic minorities 168
7.2 Pro immigrant and anti immigrant messages by type of medium 179
8.1 Occupational class and voting, 1964 2001 209
10.1 Performance at first degree level, 1996/7 279
10.2 Highest qualification held among people of working age, by ethnic group
and age, Spring 1997 280
11.1 Broad types of work 303
11.2 The move towards post industrial society 304
11.3 Employees in the UK: by gender and occupation, 1991 and 2000 305
11.4 Economic activity rates in the UK: by ethnic group, gender and age,
1999 2000 314
11.5 The employment effects of flexible employment and labour
market regulation 317
12.1 Estimated revenue from international programme exports, 1987 95 337
12.2 Number of hours per year devoted to developing countries in current affairs
programmes 343
12.3 British men and women over 16 who watch TV, listen to the radio and read
books,1977 97 344
12.4 Types of terrestrial TV programme watched by UK audiences aged four plus,
1990 97 345
xxiii
xiv ^yj^r INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY
12.5 Households in selected income groups that have access to information and
communication facilities, 1997 98 349
13.1 Ratio of symptom episodes to consultations 358
13.2 Chronic sickness rates by social class, UK, 1994 373
14.1 Recorded indictable/notifiable offences, England and Wales, 1985 96 386
U.2 Estimated number of crimes committed against adults, England and Wales,
1997 384
14.3 Offenders found guilty of/cautioned for indictable offences, by gender, age and
type of offence, England and Wales, 1998
14.4 Recorded cases of stop and search, England and Wales, 1993/4
14.5 Stop and search, by police force, England and Wales, 1993/4 391
14.6 Proportion of all burglary incidents experienced by high risk groups 396
14.7 Proportion of all vehicle related thefts experienced by high risk groups 396
14.8 Proportion of all violent incidents experienced by high risk groups 397
15.1 Perspectives on knowledge 418
16.1 Online social science databases: some examples 445
16.2 The broad methodological differences between positivism and
anti positivism 449
16.3 Advantages and disadvantages of surveys 455
16.4 Advantages and disadvantages of observational methods 460
17.1 Durkheim s analysis of problems and solutions in modernity 473
17.2 Marx on capitalist modernity and the socialist solution 478
17.3 Weber s dilemmas in modernity and rationalisation 487
18.1 Actors, meanings and society 508
19.1 Fordism and post Fordism 520
7.1 Religion still matters 183
8.1 The digital divide 197
8.2 Value changes across the generations 212
8.3 The fracturing of British values 213
10.1 Participation in higher education by social class, 1991/2 1997/8 275
10.2 The changing position of male and female pupils, A level and Scottish Higher
passes, 1975/6 1996/7 277
10.3 Male and female passes for GCSE maths, science, modern languages and
English, 1988 96 278
11.1 Employees jobs in the UK: by gender and industry 305
11.2 Economic activity rates in the UK: by gender and age, 1971 and 2000 316
12.1 British men and women over 15 who read a national daily newspaper,
1981 99 345
12.2 UK adults who have used the Internet, by social class of head of household,
July 2000 350
12.3 Number of computer systems connected to the Internet per 1000 people (1998)
and television per 1000 people (1996), selected countries 351
U.1 Recorded crime in England and Wales, indictable/notifiable offences,
1971 99 383
U.2 Comparison of BCS and police counts of crime, England and Wales, 1997 384
U.3 Risk of crime in 1995 397
14 .4 Offenders found guilty of or cautioned for notifiable offences, England and
Wales, 1995 99 402
XXV
1.1 Greenpeace protesters obstructing nuclear tests in the South Pacific 9
2.1 Photography defined the Otherness of the indigenous peoples of Africa,
Asia, Australia and America in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries 26
2.2 Sao Paulo 37
2.3 The role of the 1950s woman 39
3.1 Selected milestones in the globalisation of the world 51
3.2 The information industry at work 55
3.3 The World Trade Centre, New York, September 11, 2001 62
4.1 Inequality kills 78
4.2 Impairment and disability 90
5.1 Marxist view of the class system under capitalism 101
5.2 Social class stratification by income and wealth 103
5.3 The pattern of women s employment 109
5.4 The relative decline in manual and skilled manual employment 117
6.1 Mothering 138
6.2 Gender segregation in the caring professions 145
6.3 Sigourney Weaver as Ripley in Alien 151
7.1 Global migration, 1945 73 166
7.2 The social aftermath of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Centre,
September 11, 2001 174
7.3 Multi culture in society 182
8.1 Michel Foucault 196
8.2 The campaign for female suffrage 218
8.3 UN Security Council 221
9.1 Children in the nuclear family 234
9.2 Perspectives on welfarism and the nuclear family 245
9.3 Child care in alternative families 252
xxvii
xxviii tt^J INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY
10.1 Social class influences in higher education 276
10.2 The classroom 287
11.1 Call centre employment 307
11.2 The demand for domestic labour 312
12.1 Gender inequalities when watching the television 332
12.2 Rupert Murdoch 340
13.1 The ageing process 363
13.2 Complementary and orthodox perceptions of responsibility for health care 371
15.1 Science and hypotheses 414
15.2 Sport: entertainment or quasi religion? 428
16.1 Poor housing and health 447
16.2 Official crime statistics and reporting priorities 452
16.3 Ethnography and social behaviour 457
17.1 Who is making a profit at the expense of whom?
17.2 MaryWollstonecraft 489
18.1 The dramatisation of identity 503
19.1 Postmodernity: a new phase of capitalist social structure? 519
19.2 Society, language and meaning 522
|
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV014197963 |
callnumber-first | H - Social Science |
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callnumber-raw | HM586 |
callnumber-search | HM586 |
callnumber-sort | HM 3586 |
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dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Soziologie |
edition | 4. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre | 1\p (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Einführung |
id | DE-604.BV014197963 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T18:59:25Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0333945719 0333945727 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-009732647 |
oclc_num | 49894729 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-824 DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-824 DE-11 |
physical | XXXIII, 596 S. zahlr. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2002 |
publishDateSearch | 2002 |
publishDateSort | 2002 |
publisher | Palgrave Macmillan |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Introductory sociology Tony Bilton ... 4. ed. Basingstoke [u.a.] Palgrave Macmillan 2002 XXXIII, 596 S. zahlr. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Sociologie Soziologie Sociology Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 gnd rswk-swf 1\p (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 s DE-604 Bilton, Tony Sonstige oth HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009732647&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Introductory sociology Sociologie Soziologie Sociology Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4077624-4 (DE-588)4151278-9 |
title | Introductory sociology |
title_auth | Introductory sociology |
title_exact_search | Introductory sociology |
title_full | Introductory sociology Tony Bilton ... |
title_fullStr | Introductory sociology Tony Bilton ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Introductory sociology Tony Bilton ... |
title_short | Introductory sociology |
title_sort | introductory sociology |
topic | Sociologie Soziologie Sociology Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Sociologie Soziologie Sociology Einführung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009732647&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT biltontony introductorysociology |