The Emerald Guide to C. Wright Mills

The Emerald Guide to C. Wright Mills
Author: A. Javier Treviño
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2021-07-26
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1800715412

This book offers a comprehensive guide to reading and understanding the development of Mills's sociological ideas, placing them in the context of his life and his position in American sociology.

The Emerald Guide to C. Wright Mills

The Emerald Guide to C. Wright Mills
Author: A. Javier Treviño
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2021-07-26
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781800715448

This book offers a comprehensive guide to reading and understanding the development of Mills's sociological ideas, placing them in the context of his life and his position in American sociology. The Emerald Guide to C. Wright Mills focusses on his concern with the interrelationship between social structure and personality, and with the bureaucratisation of modern society and the power relations it produces. The book takes a chronological and biographical approach in illustrating the development of Mills's ideas and interests over the course of his career. In doing so, it reveals the consistency as well as the evolution of his thinking. Essential reading for students and those new to Mills's ideas, this is a readable, clear, and comprehensive overview of the work of C. Wright Mills, and conveys his influence on contemporary social thought.

The Emerald Guide to Ann Oakley

The Emerald Guide to Ann Oakley
Author: Graham Crow
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing
Total Pages: 217
Release: 2024-07-11
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1800715617

The Emerald Guide to Ann Oakley is a comprehensive guide to reading and understanding the development of Oakley's sociological ideas, placing them in the context of her life and her ground-breaking research into domestic and gender sociology.

The Emerald Guide to Max Weber

The Emerald Guide to Max Weber
Author: John Scott
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing
Total Pages: 223
Release: 2019-03-08
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1787691896

This introductory text provides an authoritative guide to the key ideas of Max Weber, charting the development of his ideas and placing them in context of his life and times, offering a primer that will form the basis of further, more detailed, reading.

The Routledge International Handbook of Talcott Parsons Studies

The Routledge International Handbook of Talcott Parsons Studies
Author: A. Javier Treviño
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2021-11-22
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1000475166

Talcott Parsons was the leading theorist in American sociology—and perhaps in world sociology—from the 1940s to the 1970s. He created the dominant school of thought that made "Parsonian" a standard description of a theoretical attempt to unify social science, as reflected in the fact that his contributions to the discipline cover a range of issues, including medicine, the family, religion, law, the economy, race relations, and politics—to name but a few. This volume brings together leading scholars working in the field of "Parsonian Studies" to explore the background of Parsons’s work, the content of his oeuvre, and his subsequent influence. Thematically organized, it covers Parsons’s contributions and impacts in areas including the philosophy and methodology of the social sciences; cultural sociology; personality, mental illness, and psychoanalysis; and economics and political and economic sociology. In addition, it considers his influence in different areas of the world and on particular students, and offers insights into the Parsonian tradition’s practical application to contemporary social issues. An authoritative, comprehensive, and in-depth critical assessment of the Parsonian legacy, The Routledge International Handbook of Talcott Parsons Studies will appeal to scholars across the social sciences and in sociology and social theory in particular, with interests in the history of sociology and the enduring relevance of Talcott Parsons.

Encyclopedia of Critical Political Science

Encyclopedia of Critical Political Science
Author: Clyde W. Barrow
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Total Pages: 813
Release: 2024-03-14
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1800375913

An indispensable and exemplary reference work, this Encyclopedia adeptly navigates the multidisciplinary field of critical political science, providing a comprehensive overview of the methods, approaches, concepts, scholars and journals that have come to influence the disciplineÕs development over the last six decades.

Frederik Ruysch and His Thesaurus Anatomicus

Frederik Ruysch and His Thesaurus Anatomicus
Author: Joanna Ebenstein
Publisher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 254
Release: 2022-09-20
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0262046032

A lavishly illustrated guide to the magnum opus of the great seventeenth-century anatomist, master embalmer, artist, and collector of specimens. Frederik Ruysch (1638-1731) was a celebrated Dutch anatomist, master embalmer, and museologist. He is best remembered today for strange tableaux, crafted from fetal skeletons and other human remains, that flicker provocatively at the edges of science, art, and memento mori. Ruysch exhibited these pieces, along with hundreds of other artful specimens, in his home museum and catalogued them in his lavishly illustrated Thesaurus Anatomicus. This book offers the first English translation of Ruysch's guide to his collection, along with all the illustrations from the original volume, photographs of some his most imaginative extant specimens, and more. Ruysch was at once a brilliant scientist, a preternaturally gifted technician, an esteemed physician, a religious moralizer, and an artist whose prime form of expression was the medium of human remains. His works were sometimes described as "Rembrandts of anatomical preparation"; today they seem so strange that we can hardly believe that they even existed, much less that they were so popular in their time. His combination of the religious and the scientific, the painstakingly accurate and the extravagantly fantastical, offers vivid testimony of an era in which science overlapped seamlessly with religion and art. Essays accompanying Ruysch's text and images consider such topics as the historical context of Ruysch's work, the paradox of an artist of death whose work engenders the illusion of life, the conservation of Ruysch's specimens, and the shifting ascendancies of romanticism and rationality in the natural sciences.