The promise of sociology [electronic resource] : the classical tradition and contemporary sociological thinking / Rob Beamish.

By: Beamish, Rob B. (Rob Barker), 1949-Material type: TextTextPublisher: Toronto [Ont.] : University of Toronto Press, c2010 2013)Description: 1 online resource (xxi, 330 p.) : digital fileContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781442693623 (electronic bk.)Subject(s): Sociology -- Textbooks | Sociology -- Philosophy -- Textbooks | Culture -- TextbooksDDC classification: 301 LOC classification: HM586 | .B42 2010ebOnline resources: King's University Access from University of Toronto Press
Contents:
Why think sociologically? The millennial, knowledge, and culture ; The sociological imagination : beyond "everyday stocks of knowledge" -- The classical tradition. Marx and the dialectic of dynamic, unstable social formations ; Marx, the Communist Manifesto, and modernity ; From Descartes to Durkheim : towards a science of society ; Durkheim and the systematic study of social facts ; Weber and the interpretive understanding of social action ; The spirit of capitalism, modernity, and the postmodern world -- Sociology and contemporary culture. The fear of mass culture ; The dialectics of popular culture ; The promise of sociology.
Summary: Unlike most introductory texts that take a topical approach to studying sociology, this smart, challenging, and accessibly written text looks at the core principles of the discipline, making links to a contemporary context. Both students and instructors will find in these pages a fresh and original approach to teaching sociology. Beamish begins by providing a sociological profile of today's students, juxtaposing their collective biography against the current historical moment. He builds on this discussion by introducing Mills's concept of the sociological imagination and outlining a method for thinking sociologically; then, he uses Hitchcock's film Psycho to illustrate the difference between psychological and sociological analysis. Having established the usefulness of sociological thinking, Beamish moves back to the classical theorists, outlining in depth their important contributions to sociology. He concludes the book by applying concepts from the classical tradition to a sociological discussion of culture-ending with an analysis of Bob Dylan's artistry to illustrate how these concepts have an enduring quality in contemporary times.
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HM585 .U54 2009 C5 Understanding society : HM585 .U54 2009 C6 Understanding society : HM585 .U54 2009 C7 Understanding society : HM586 .B42 2010eb The promise of sociology HM586 .B42 2012 Sociology and the Contemporary World: HM586 .B795 2007 Sociology : HM586 .B898 2007 C1 Sociology :

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Why think sociologically? The millennial, knowledge, and culture ; The sociological imagination : beyond "everyday stocks of knowledge" -- The classical tradition. Marx and the dialectic of dynamic, unstable social formations ; Marx, the Communist Manifesto, and modernity ; From Descartes to Durkheim : towards a science of society ; Durkheim and the systematic study of social facts ; Weber and the interpretive understanding of social action ; The spirit of capitalism, modernity, and the postmodern world -- Sociology and contemporary culture. The fear of mass culture ; The dialectics of popular culture ; The promise of sociology.

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Unlike most introductory texts that take a topical approach to studying sociology, this smart, challenging, and accessibly written text looks at the core principles of the discipline, making links to a contemporary context. Both students and instructors will find in these pages a fresh and original approach to teaching sociology. Beamish begins by providing a sociological profile of today's students, juxtaposing their collective biography against the current historical moment. He builds on this discussion by introducing Mills's concept of the sociological imagination and outlining a method for thinking sociologically; then, he uses Hitchcock's film Psycho to illustrate the difference between psychological and sociological analysis. Having established the usefulness of sociological thinking, Beamish moves back to the classical theorists, outlining in depth their important contributions to sociology. He concludes the book by applying concepts from the classical tradition to a sociological discussion of culture-ending with an analysis of Bob Dylan's artistry to illustrate how these concepts have an enduring quality in contemporary times.

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