Developments in American Sociological Theory, 1915-1950: The Decentering of the Modern Subject in Recent French Phenomenology

Pirmais vāks
SUNY Press, 1994. gada 1. janv. - 429 lappuses
This book presents a comprehensive, extended, and systematic analysis of social theory as it developed between the two World Wars, a period during which major transformation occurred. Centering on the continuities, on the one hand, and discontinuities on the other, in substantive theory, it deals with the major ideas of Cooley, Ellwood, Park, Thomas, Ogburn, Bernard, Chapin, Mead, Faris, Hankins, MacIver, Reuter, Lundberg, H. P. Becker, Parsons, Znaniecki, Sorokin, and Blumer. Finally, the problematic relevancy of the past for the present is directly confronted. The author examines how basic assumptions of theory in particular periods have used relatively unique schema and generated considerable controversy.

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Confronting Problems in the Study of Theory in American Sociology 191518194550
3
Three Epistemological Methodological Stances
29
Social Evolutionism Social Origins and Social Structure
65
Critique of Earlier Social Evolutionism and Its Legacy in the Second Period
94
Fragmentation and Demise of Social Evolutionary Change Theories
118
Discontinuities Arising within American Sociology
151
Theory Anthropology and History
172
Theory Psychiatry and Psychology
200
Possible European Influences on American Theory
273
The Concept of the Group An Analytical Summary
303
An Overview in Context Past Present and Future
322
Appendix
349
Notes
351
Selected Reference List
391
Index
419
Autortiesības

Philosophy Psychology Sociology and Symbolic Interactionism
232

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Par autoru (1994)

Roscoe C. Hinkle is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the Ohio State University. He is the author of Founding Theory of American Sociology, 1881-1915.

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