Handbook of Classical Sociological Theory

Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Other Authors: Abrutyn, Seth (Editor), Lizardo, Omar (Editor)
Summary:VII, 725 p. 29 illus.
text
Language:English
Published: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2021.
Edition:1st ed. 2021.
Series:Handbooks of Sociology and Social Research,
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-78205-4
Format: Electronic Book
Table of Contents:
  • Part I. Overarching Questions
  • Chapter 1. The Methods and Surprises of Sociological Theory (G.Jasso)
  • Chapter 2. Modernity as a classical question in sociological theory (C. Silla)
  • Chapter 3. Evolutionary Theorizing in Sociology’s Formative Period (J. Turner)
  • Chapter 4. Selfing: Integrating Pragmatism and Phenomenology to Develop a Multi-Processing Theory of the Self (E. Summers-Effler)
  • Chapter 5. The Sociology of W.E.B. Du Bois (A. Morris)
  • Part II. Central Dynamics
  • Chapter 6. Does Differentiation Matter to Sociology Anymore? (S. Abrutyn)
  • Chapter 7. Power, Regulation and Social Order in the Intersection of Political and Social Theory (R. Heiskala)
  • Chapter 8. Hermeneutics and Performance in Social Theories of Power (I. Reed)
  • Chapter 9. From Simmel to Relational Sociology (S. Mützel )
  • Chapter 10. Reflections on Class and Social Inequality: Sociology and Intersectionality in Dialogue (P.H. Collins)
  • Part III. Spheres of Social Life
  • Chapter 11. The Sociology of Kinship (A. Maryanski)
  • Chapter 12. Mediating the Sacred: Thinking through Religious Experience in the Classics and Beyond (M.Pagis)
  • Chapter 13. Polity (E. Clemens)
  • Chapter 14. Theoretical Lineages and Contemporary Concerns in the Sociology of Economic Life (S. Mudge)
  • Chapter 15. Law in Classical Sociological Theory: Coercion, Ideology, and Change (E. Cornelius)
  • Chapter 16. Education (J. Guhin)
  • Chapter 17. Art or the Aesthetic? The Relevance of the Classical Sociology of Art for the Current Sociology of Culture (B. Merriman)
  • Part IV. Theorizing New Social Forms
  • Chapter 18. Urbanization Theorizing (T. Clark)
  • Chapter 19. Crowds and Collective Behavior (C. Borch)
  • Chapter 20. Strands of Classical Theory in the Study of Social Movements (D. McAdam)
  • Chapter 21. Organizations: Theoretical Debates and the Scope of Organizational Theory (N. Fligstein)
  • Chapter 22. Democracy, Civil Sphere, Mass Society (P. Kivisto)
  • Chapter 23. The Other as Real, Imagined and Political (C. Decoteau)
  • Part V. Interactions, Symbols, and Psyche
  • Chapter 24. Empathy, Intersubjectivity and the Self (N. Ruiz)
  • Chapter 25. Symbol Systems and Social Structures (V. Leschziner)
  • Chapter 26. Consciousness and Unconsciousness (L. Chancer)
  • Part VI. Identifying Conceptual Threads
  • Chapter 27. Enculturing the Classics (O. Lizardo)
  • Chapter 28. Morality and Sociological Theory (S. Hitlin)
  • Chapter 29. Cognition, Practice and Learning in the Discourse of the Human Sciences (M. Strand)
  • Chapter 30. On the Other Side of Interests: The Rise of Values and their Transformation into Disinterest (J. Martin)
  • Chapter 31. The Cognitive Dimension (S. Turner).