The structure of sociological theory:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Belmont, CA [u.a.]
Wadsworth
1998
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Ausgabe: | 6. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXIV, 632 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0534513530 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Brief Contents
Preface xxiii
1 Sociological Theory 1
PART I FUNCTIONAL THEORIZING 7
2 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Functionalist Theorizing 9
3 The Maturing Tradition I:
Robert K. Merton s Empirical Approach 21
4 The Maturing Tradition II:
Talcott Parsons Analytical Approach 28
5 The Continuing Tradition I:
The Neofunctionalism of Jeffrey C. Alexander 43
6 The Continuing Tradition II:
The Systems Functionalism of Niklas Luhmann 60
PART II EVOLUTIONARY THEORIZING Tl
7 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Evolutionary Theorizing 79
8 The Maturing Tradition:
Ecological and Biological Theorizing 87
9 The Continuing Tradition I:
Ecological Theories 100
10 The Continuing Tradition II:
New Evolutionary Theories 123
V
Vi BRIEF CONTENTS
PART III CONFLICT THEORIZING 153
11 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Conflict Theorizing 155
12 The Maturing Tradition I:
Ralf Dahrendorf s Dialectical Theory 165
13 The Maturing Tradition II:
Lewis Coser s Conflict Functionalism 171
14 The Maturing Tradition III:
Jonathan Turner s Synthetic Conflict Theory 177
15 The Continuing Tradition I:
Neo Weberian Theories: Randall Collins Analytical Approach 184
16 The Continuing Tradition II:
Conflict Theories in Historical Comparative Sociology 194
17 The Continuing Tradition III:
Neo Marxian Theories 213
18 The Continuing Tradition IV:
Theories of Gender Inequality and Stratification 230
PART IV EXCHANGE THEORIZING 247
19 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Exchange Theorizing 249
20 The Maturing Tradition I:
George C. Homans Behavioristic Approach 263
21 The Maturing Tradition II:
Peter M. Blau s Dialectical Approach 271
22 The Maturing Tradition III:
Richard M. Emerson s Exchange Network Approach 283
23 The Maturing Tradition IV:
The Introduction of Economic and Game Theoretic Models 291
in Exchange Theory
24 The Continuing Tradition I:
Rational Choice Theories 303
25 The Continuing Tradition II:
Exchange Network Theorizing 317
PART V INTERACTIONIST THEORIZING 341
26 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of interactionist and Phenomenological Theorizing 343
27 The Maturing Tradition I:
The Codification of Symbolic Interactionism 360
BRIEF CONTENTS vii
28 The Maturing Tradition II:
Self and Identity Theories 374
29 The Maturing Tradition III:
Role Theories: Ralph H. Turner s Synthetic Approach 383
30 The Maturing Tradition IV:
Erving Goffman s Dramaturgical Approach 392
31 The Maturing Tradition V:
The Challenge of Ethnomethodology 412
32 The Continuing Tradition I:
Theories of Emotion in Social Interaction 425
33 The Continuing Tradition II:
Expectation States Theory 452
PART VI STRUCTURALIST THEORIZING 467
34 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Structuralist Theorizing 469
35 The Maturing Tradition:
French, British, and American Variations of Structural Theorizing 478
36 The Continuing Tradition I:
Anthony Giddens Structuration Theory 491
37 The Continuing Tradition II:
Cultural Theories 503
38 The Continuing Tradition III:
Network Analysis 520
39 The Continuing Tradition IV:
Peter M. Blau s Macrostructural Theory 531
PART VII CRITICAL THEORIZING 543
40 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of the Critical Analysis of Modernity 545
41 The Maturing Tradition:
The Frankfurt School and the Cultural Turn 552
42 The Continuing Tradition I:
Jiirgen Habermas Frankfurt School Project 559
43 The Continuing Tradition II:
The Feminist Critique of Sociological Theory: Gender, Politics, 574
and Patriarchy
44 The Continuing Tradition III:
Theories of Postmodernism 597
Contents
Preface xxiii
1 Sociological Theory 1
The Nature of Scientific Theory 1
The Critique of Scientific Theory in Sociology 4
Seven Basic Theoretical Orientations 4
PART I FUNCTIONAL THEORIZING 7
2 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Functionalist Theorizing 9
The Organismic Analogy 9
The Analytical Functionalism of Herbert Spencer 10
Functionalism and Emile Durkheim 12
Functionalism and the Anthropological Tradition 13
The Functionalism of A. R. Raddiffe Brown 14
The Functionalism of Bronislaw Malinowski 15
Functionalism and the Ghost of Max Weber 17
The Emergence of Functionalism: An Overview 18
VIII
CONTENTS JX
3 The Maturing Tradition I:
Robert K. Merton s Empirical Approach 21
Theories of the Middle Range 22
Merton s Paradigm for Functional Analysis 23
The Functional Unity Postulate 23
The Issue of Functional Universality 23
The Issue of Indispensability 24
A Protocol for Executing Functional Analysis 25
Conclusion 26
4 The Maturing Tradition II:
Talcott Parsons Analytical Approach 28
The Structure of Social Action 28
The Social System 30
The Transition To Functional Imperativism 34
The Informational Hierarchy of Control 36
Generalized Media of Exchange 37
Parsons on Social Change 38
Parsons on The Human Condition 39
5 The Continuing Tradition I:
The Neofunctionalism of Jeffrey C. Alexander 43
Alexander s Advocacy for Postpositivism 43
Neofunctionalism as Generalized Discourse 47
The Multidimensionality of the Social World 47
The Micro Macro Linkage 49
The Method of Specification 51
Ideology 52
Systems Models 52
Neofunctionalist Research Programs: Two Illustrations 53
The Analysis of Change 5 3
The Analysis of Culture 55
Conclusion 56
6 The Continuing Tradition II:
The Systems Functionalism of Niklas Luhmann 60
Luhmann s General Systems Approach 61
System and Environment 61
Dimensions of the Environment 61
X CONTENTS
Types of Social Systems 62
System Differentiation, Integration, and Conflict 63
Communications Media, Reflexivity, and Self Thematization 65
Luhmann s Basic Approach 66
Luhmann s Conception of Social Evolution 67
The Underlying Mechanisms of Evolution 67
Evolution and Social Differentiation 68
The Functional Differentiation of Society 70
Politics as A Social System 70
The A utonomy of the Legal System 72
The Economy as A Social System 73
PART II EVOLUTIONARY THEORIZING 77
7 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Evolutionary Theorizing 79
Herbert Spencer as the First Sociological Bio Ecologist 80
Emile Durkheim s Bio Ecological Analogy 82
Charles Darwin and Natural Selection 83
Conclusion 84
8 The Maturing Tradition:
Ecological and Biological Theorizing 87
Urban Ecology 87
The Chicago School 87
Borrowing From the Science of Ecology 88
The General Chicago School Model of Urban Ecology 88
Genetics and Natural Selection 90
The Genetics of the Individual 90
The Genetics of the Population 91
The Codification of Sociobiology 92
The First True Sociobiologists 93
Conclusion 97
9 The Continuing Tradition I:
Ecological Theories 100
Amos H. Hawley s Macro Level Ecological Theory 100
Production, Transportation, and Communication W0
The Environment 101
Functions and Key Functions 101
Equilibrium and Change 103
Growth and Evolution 104
CONTENTS Xi
Theories of Urban Ecology 110
Theories of Organizational Ecology 114
Michael T. Hannan and John Freeman s Ecological Theory 114
J. Miller Mcpherson s Ecology Theory 117
Conclusion 120
10 The Continuing Tradition II:
New Evolutionary Theories 123
Sociobiological Theorizing 124
Pierre van den Berghe s Approach 124
Joseph Lopreato s Approach 128
Cross Species Comparisons of Social Forms: 131
Richard Machalek s Approach 131
Stage Theories of Evolution 135
Gerhard Lenski, Patrick Nolan, and Jean Lenski s Evolutionary Theory 136
Stephen K. Sanderson s Evolutionary Approach to Social Transformations 139
Lee Freese s Model of Biosociocultural Regimes 141
The Return To Theorizing About Human Nature 143
/. Richard Udry s Gender Theory 143
Alexandra Maryanski s Cross Species Comparative Analysis on the Origins 145
of Human Sociality
Conclusion 148
PART III CONFLICT THEORIZING 153
11 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Conflict Theorizing 155
Karl Marx and Conflict Theory 156
Max Weber and Conflict Theory 157
Georg Simmel and Conflict Theory 160
The Proliferation of Conflict Theories 162
12 The Maturing Tradition I:
Ralf Dahrendorf s Dialectical Theory 165
Dahrendorf s Critique of Functionalism 165
Dahrendorf s Dialectical Assumptions 166
Dahrendorf s Theoretical Propositions 169
Conclusion 170
XII CONTENTS
13 The Maturing Tradition II:
Lewis Coser s Conflict Functionalism 171
The Causes of Conflict 172
The Violence of Conflict 173
The Duration of Conflict 173
The Functions of Social Conflict 174
Conclusion 176
14 The Maturing Tradition III:
Jonathan Turner s Synthetic Conflict Theory 177
A Process Model of Conflict 177
Stage 3. Withdrawal of Legitimacy 179
Stage 4. Initial Awareness of Objective Interests 179
Stage 5. Emotional Arousal of Deprived 180
Stage 6. Periodic Collective Outbursts 180
Stage 7. Increased Intensity 180
Stage 8. Efforts At Organization 181
Stage 9. The Degree of Violence in the Conflict 181
The Emerging Contemporary Era in Conflict Theory 183
15 The Continuing Tradition I:
Neo Weberian Theories: Randall Collins Analytical Approach 184
The Micro Basis of Social Organization 184
Conflict Sociology 185
Talk and Ritual 186
Deferences and Demeanor 187
Class Cultures 188
Organizational Processes 189
The State and Economy 191
Geopolitics 191
Conclusion 192
16 The Continuing Tradition II:
Conflict Theories in Historical Comparative Sociology 194
Mass Mobilization and State Breakdown 195
Barrington Moore s Study of the Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy 195
Jeffrey Paige s Theory of Agrarian Revolution 199
Charles Tilly s Theory of Resource Mobilization 201
Theda Skocpol s Analysis of States and Social Revolutions 205
CONTENTS Xiii
Jack Goldstone s Theory of State Breakdown 208
Conclusion 211
17 The Continuing Tradition III:
Neo Marxian Theories 213
A Brief Review of Marx s Substantive Argument 213
Neo Marxian Class Analysis 215
The Analytical Marxism of Erik Olin Wright 215
Social Class, Emancipation, and History 216
Micro Level Versus Macro Level Class Analysis 216
The Problem of the Middle Class 219
The Overall Marxian Project 222
Neo Marxian World Systems Analysis 223
Immanuel Wallerstein s Analysis of World System 223
The End of Capitalism? 22 7
Conclusion 227
18 The Continuing Tradition IV:
Theories of Gender Inequality and Stratification 230
Randall Collins Early Gender Stratification Theory 231
Rae Lesser Blumberg s Gender Stratification Theory 232
Janet Saltzman Chafetz s Gender Equity Theory 235
The Maintenance of Gender Stratification 236
Changing Systems of Gender Inequality and Stratification 237
Conclusions: Efforts At Theoretical Synthesis 240
The Effects of the Political Economy 243
Fundamental Causal Conditions 243
Gender Resource Mobilization and Conflict 244
PART IV EXCHANGE THEORIZING 247
19 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Exchange Theorizing 249
Exchange Theory in Classical Economics 249
Exchange Theory in Anthropology 250
Sir James Frazer 250
Bronislaw Malinowski and Nonmaterial Exchange 252
Marcel Mauss and the Emergence of Exchange Structuralism 253
Claude Levi Strauss and Structuralism 254
Psychological Behaviorism and Exchange Theory 256
XIV CONTENTS
The Sociological Tradition and Exchange Theory 258
Marx s Theory of Exchange and Conflict 259
Georg Simmel s Exchange Theory 259
Conclusion: Exchange Theory in the Contemporary Era 261
20 The Maturing Tradition I:
George C. Homans Behavioristic Approach 263
The Basic Approach 263
The Basic Exchange Principles 265
Using the Basic Principles To Construct Explanations 266
From Behavior To Macrostructure 268
21 The Maturing Tradition II:
Peter M. Blau s Dialectical Approach 271
The Basic Exchange Principles 271
Elementary Systems of Exchange 272
Strains Toward integration 274
Strains Toward Opposition 275
Exchange Systems and Macrostructure 277
Mediating Values 277
Institutionalization 277
Levels of Social Organization 279
Blau s Image of Social Organization 280
Conclusion 281
22 The Maturing Tradition III:
Richard M. Emerson s Exchange Network Approach 283
The Basic Strategy 283
The Basic Exchange Processes 284
The Basic Exchange Propositions 284
Structure, Networks, and Exchange 285
Unilateral Monopoly 285
Division of Labor 286
Social Circles 287
Stratified Networks 288
Conclusion 289
CONTENTS XV
23 The Maturing Tradition IV:
The introduction of Economic and Game Theoretic Models 291
in Exchange Theory
Rational Actors in Markets 292
Neoclassical Assumptions 292
The Debate Over Neoclassical Assumptions 293
Game Theory 295
The Prisoner s Dilemma: Game Theorists Favorite Illustration 298
Contrasting Prisoner s Dilemma With A Pareto Optimal Equilibrium 299
Conclusion 300
24 The Continuing Tradition I:
Rational Choice Theories 303
Michael Hechter s Theory of Group Solidarity 304
The Basic Problem of Order in Rational Choice Theorizing 304
The Basis of Social Control: Dependence, Monitoring, and Sanctioning 305
Types of Groups 306
Patterns of Control in Compensatory and Obligatory Groups 309
The Theory Summarized 310
Macrostructural Implications 310
James S. Coleman s Theory of Group Solidarity 311
Transferring Rights to Act 312
The Demand for Norms and Sanctions 312
Principles of Group Solidarity: Synthesizing Hechter s and Coleman s Theories 314
Conclusion 315
25 The Continuing Tradition II:
Exchange Network Theorizing 317
The Core Ideas in Emerson s Approach 317
Karen S. Cook s Theoretical Program 319
Commitment Processes in Networks 319
Centrality in Networks and the Distribution of Power 320
Equity and Justice in Exchange Networks 321
Generalized Exchange Networks 323
Edward J. Lawler s Theoretical Program 325
Power and Bargaining 325
Commitment in Exchange Networks 329
Linda D. Molm s Theoretical Program 332
The Basic Question 333
The Basic Concepts 333
The Theoretical Answer 334
I
XVI CONTENTS !
New Theoretical Directions 336
The Paradoxes of Reciprocal Exchanges 337
Conclusion 337
PART V INTERACTIONIST THEORIZING 341
26 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of interactionist and Phenomenological Theorizing 343
Early American insights into interaction 343
William James Analysis of Self 343
Self and Social Process: Charles Norton Cooley 344
John Dewey s Pragmatism 344
Pragmatism, Darwinism, and Behaviorism in Mead s Thought 345
George Herbert Mead s Synthesis 346
Conceptualizing Structure and Role 349
Early European insights 350
Georg Simmel Analysis of Interaction 350
tmile Durkheim s Metamorphosis 351
Max Weber s Analysis of Social Action 352
European Phenomenology 352
Building on Early Interactionist Insights 357
27 The Maturing Tradition I:
The Codification of Symbolic interactionism 360
Points of Convergence in Symbolic interactionism 360
Humans as Symbol Users 360
Symbolic Communication 361
Interaction and Role Taking 361
Interaction, Humans, and Society 361
Areas of Disagreement and Controversy in Symbolic Interaction 362
The Nature of the Individual 362
The Nature of Interaction 363
The Nature of Social Organization 364
The Nature of Methods 364
The Nature and Possibilities of Sociological Theory 367
Conclusion 369
28 The Maturing Tradition II:
Self and Identity Theories 374
The Identity Theory of Sheldon Stryker 374
Designations and Definitions 374
Identities and the Salience Hierarchy 375
CONTENTS xvjj
Commitment and Self 375
The Key Propositions 375
George P. McCall and J.L. Simmons Theory of Identity 377
Role Identity and Role Support 377
The Mechanisms for Maintaining Role Support 3 78
The Hierarchy of Prominence 378
The Underlying Exchange Dynamic 379
Conclusion 380
29 The Maturing Tradition III:
Role Theories: Ralph H. Turner s Synthetic Approach 383
The Role Making Process 384
The Folk Norm of Consistency 385
The Tentative Nature of interaction 385
The Process of Role Verification 385
Self Conceptions and Role 385
Turner s Strategy for Building Role Theory 386
Emergence and Character of Roles 386
Role as An interactive Framework 387
Role in Relation To Actor 387
Role in Organizational Settings 388
Role in Societal Setting 388
Role and the Person 389
Conclusion: Generating Explanatory Laws 389
Functionality 390
Tenability 390
Representation 390
30 The Maturing Tradition IV:
Erving Goffman s Dramaturgical Approach 392
The Dramaturgical Metaphor 393
The Presentation of Self 394
Focused Interaction 396
Encounters 397
Ritual 398
Roles 399
Self 400
Talk 401
Disruption and Repair in Focused interaction 402
Unfocused Interaction 403
xviii contents
Frames and the Organization of Experience 405
What Is A Frame? 406
Primary Frames 407
Keys and Keying 407
Fabrications 408
The Complexity of Experience 408
Conclusion 409
31 The Maturing Tradition V:
The Challenge of Ethnomethodology 412
The Origins of Ethnomethodology 413
Blumer s interactionism and Ethnomethodology 413
Goffman s Dramaturgical Analysis and Ethnomethodology 413
Alfred Schutz s Phenomenological Analysis and Ethnomethodology 414
The Nature of Ethnomethodology 414
Metaphysics Or Methodology? 414
Concepts and Principles of Ethnomethodology 416
Varieties of Ethnomethodological Inquiry 418
Conclusion 422
32 The Continuing Tradition I:
Theories of Emotion in Social interaction 425
Arlie Hochschild s Dramaturgical Theory of Emotions 425
Symbolic interactionist Theories of Emotion 426
Susan Shott s Role Taking and Social Control Theory 426
David Heise s Affect Control Theory 428
Sheldon Stryker s Identity Theory of Emotions 431
Status and Power Theories of Emotion 432
Randall Collins Theory of interaction Rituals 432
Theodore Kemper s Status Power Model 435
Cecilia Ridgeway s and Joseph Berger s Expectation States Theories of Affect 437
Network Theories of Emotion 439
Barry Markovsky and Edward Lawler s Theory of Group Solidarity 440
Edward J. Lawler s Theory of Emotion and Commitment 441
Evolutionary interaction Theories of Emotion 442
Michael Hammond s Affect Maximization Theory 442
Jonathan Turner s Evolutionary Theory 444
Psychoanalytic interaction Theories of Emotion 446
Thomas Scheff s Psychoanalytic Theory of Emotion 446
Jonathan Turner s Psychoanalytic Theory 447
Conclusion 44 $
CONTENTS XiX
33 The Continuing Tradition II:
Expectation States Theory 452
The Core Ideas 453
Applications of the Core Ideas 453
Power and Prestige 454
Status Characteristics 455
Multiple Characteristic Status Situations 456
Distributive Justice 457
Sources of Self Evaluation 458
Formation of Reward Expectations 459
The Evolution of Status Expectations 460
Status Cues, Expectations, and Behavior 460
Legitimation of Power and Prestige Hierarchies 461
Conclusion: State Organizing Processes 462
PART VI STRUCTURALIST THEORIZING 467
34 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of Structuralist Theorizing 469
Structural Elements in Karl Marx s Theories 469
Emile Durkheim s Functionalism and the Emergence of Structural Sociology 470
Georg Simmel s Formal Structuralism 473
Interactionism and Microstructuralism 474
George Herbert Mead s Behavioristic Structuralism 474
Alfred Schutz s Phenomenological Structuralism 475
The Emerging Diversity of Structural and Structuralist Analysis 475
35 The Maturing Tradition:
French, British, and American Variations of Structural Theorizing 478
The French Structural Tradition of Claude Levi Strauss 478
The British Structural Tradition 481
The American Structural Tradition in Social Psychology 482
Jacob Moreno and Sociometric Techniques 482
Studies of Communications in Groups: Alex Bavelas and Harold Leavitt 484
Early Gestalt and Balance Approaches: Heider, Newcomb, Cartwright and Harary 485
Conclusion 488
36 The Continuing Tradition I:
Anthony Giddens Structuration Theory 491
The Critique of Scientific Social Theory 491
XX CONTENTS
The Theory of Structuration 492
Reconceptualizing Structure and Social System 492
Reconceptualizing Institutions 495
Structural Principles, Sets, and Properties 495
Structural Contradiction 496
Agents, Agency, and Action 497
Routinization and Regionalization of Interaction 498
Conclusion 501
37 The Continuing Tradition II:
Cultural Theories 503
Cultural Analysis: Robert Wuthnow 504
Cultural Structure, Ritual, and Institutional Context 504
The Moral Order 505
The Dynamics of the Moral Order 507
Constructivist Structuralism: Pierre Bourdieu 509
Criticisms of Existing Theories 510
Bourdieu s Cultural Conflict Theory 512
Conclusion 517
38 The Continuing Tradition III:
Network Analysis 520
Basic Theoretical Concepts in Network Analysis 521
Points and Nodes 521
Links, Ties, and Connections 521
Patterns and Configurations of Ties 522
Number of Ties 523
Directedness 523
Reciprocity of Ties 523
Transitivity of Ties 523
Density of Ties 523
Strength of Ties 524
Bridges 524
Brokerage 525
Centrality 526
Equivalence 527
Conclusion 523
39 The Continuing Tradition IV:
Peter M. Blau s Macrostructural Theory 531
Blau s Conception of Macrostructure 53
CONTENTS XXI
The Formal Theory of Macrostructure 533
The Theoretical Strategy 533
The Basic Assumptions and Theorems 534
Exogenous Forces and Blau s Theory of Macrostructure 540
Conclusion 541
PART VII CRITICAL THEORIZING 543
40 The Emerging Tradition:
The Rise of The Critical Analysis of Modernity 545
Critical Strains in Marx s Thought 546
Weber s Pessimism: The Basic Dilemma for Early Critical Theorists 548
Simmel s Implicit Attack on Marx s Emancipatory Project 549
Critical Theory, Liberation, and Postmodernism 550
41 The Maturing Tradition:
The Frankfurt School and the Cultural Turn 552
The Frankfurt School 553
Gyorgy Lukdcs 553
Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adomo 554
The Hegelian Turn in Critical Theory 555
Gramsci s Theory of Ideological Hegemony 555
Althusser s Structuralism 556
Conclusion 557
42 The Continuing Tradition I:
Jiirgen Habermas Frankfurt School Project 559
Habermas s Analysis of The Public Sphere 560
The Critique of Science 561
Legitimation Crises in Society 563
Early Analyses of Speech and interaction 564
Habermas s Reconceptualization of Social Evolution 566
The Theory of Communicative Action 567
The Overall Project 568
The Reconceptualization of Action and Rationality 568
The Lifeworld and System Processes of Society 570
Evolutionary Dynamics and Societal Crises 571
The Goal of Critical Theory 572
XXii CONTENTS
43 The Continuing Tradition II:
The Feminist Critique of Sociological Theory: Gender, Politics
and Patriarchy 574
Representation and The Construction of Gender 575
Early Challenges To Social Science 575
A Sociology for Women: Feminist Methodologies, Epistemologies, and
Standpoint Theories 577
Critiquing The Critique: Challenges To Critical Feminist Theory 583
The Feminist Critique and the Reconceptualization of Sociological Theory 584
Parsonian Functionalism 585
Rational Choice Theory 585
Marxist Theory 587
Theories of Postmodernism 589
44 The Continuing Tradition III:
Theories of Postmodernism 597
The Postmodern Critique of Science 597
Jean Frangois Lyotard 599
Richard Rorty 600
Illustrative Elaborations and Extensions within Sociology 600
Economic Postmodernism 602
Fredric Jameson 603
David Harvey 604
Scott Lash and John Urry 606
Cultural Postmodernism 608
Jean Baudrillard 608
Further Elaborations of Cultural Postmodernism 610
Conclusion: Assessing the Postmodern Project 613
Name Index
Subject Index
|
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- |
author_variant | j h t jh jht |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV014431252 |
classification_rvk | MR 5100 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)37567379 (DE-599)BVBBV014431252 |
dewey-full | 301 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 301 - Sociology and anthropology |
dewey-raw | 301 |
dewey-search | 301 |
dewey-sort | 3301 |
dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Soziologie |
edition | 6. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre | 1\p (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Einführung |
id | DE-604.BV014431252 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T19:02:43Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0534513530 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-009867813 |
oclc_num | 37567379 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-188 |
physical | XXIV, 632 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 1998 |
publishDateSearch | 1998 |
publishDateSort | 1998 |
publisher | Wadsworth |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Turner, Jonathan H. 1942- Verfasser (DE-588)132798573 aut The structure of sociological theory Jonathan H. Turner 6. ed. Belmont, CA [u.a.] Wadsworth 1998 XXIV, 632 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Sociology Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 gnd rswk-swf Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd rswk-swf Soziologische Theorie (DE-588)4077628-1 gnd rswk-swf 1\p (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content Soziologische Theorie (DE-588)4077628-1 s DE-604 Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 s 2\p DE-604 Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 s 3\p DE-604 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009867813&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 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 3\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Turner, Jonathan H. 1942- The structure of sociological theory Sociology Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 gnd Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd Soziologische Theorie (DE-588)4077628-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4077624-4 (DE-588)4059787-8 (DE-588)4077628-1 (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 | Sociology Soziologie (DE-588)4077624-4 gnd Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd Soziologische Theorie (DE-588)4077628-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Sociology Soziologie Theorie Soziologische Theorie Einführung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009867813&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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