Posted on

The Sociology Book (Big Ideas Simply Explained) by DK Publishing

By DK Publishing

The Sociology Book from DK is an advent to the topic that tells you all approximately what society is and what makes it tick. With greater than a hundred principles from the world's most famous sociologists, protecting themes as various because the results of globalization; problems with equality, variety, id, and human rights; the position of associations; and the increase of city dwelling in sleek society, this e-book information all of the key ideas of sociological thought.

- a part of an award-winning sequence that makes use of an leading edge image procedure and inventive use of typography to explain hard-to-grasp innovations and clarify tremendous ideas
- Explores sociological theories formulated via greater than a hundred recognized sociologists, from Jane Addams to Sharon Zukin
- effortless to navigate step by step summaries clarify each one proposal in a nutshell
- Biographies of key sociologists and social activists supply a historic context to every idea
- A listing of social thinkers comprises additional biographies of sociologists from all over the world

Show description

Read Online or Download The Sociology Book (Big Ideas Simply Explained) PDF

Similar sociology books

Remembering Slavery: African Americans Talk About Their Personal Experiences of Slavery and Freedom

Thousands of american citizens have learn works of literature, from The Autobiography of Frederick Douglass to loved that try to painting existence lower than slavery. yet just a couple of humans alive this present day have heard the particular voices of guys and ladies who skilled these darkish days firsthand. Now, for the 1st time, ancient recordings of former slaves recounting their very own studies of slavery are made to be had to the yank public in Remembering Slavery.

Nu simplement : nudité, nudisme et naturisme

Ce livre s'adresse tout aussi bien aux néophytes qu'aux gens rompus au mode de vie naturiste. Il constitue une réflexion sur le nu non sexuel tel qu'il se manifeste au Québec et en Occident en général. Quiconque se pose une query à propos du naturisme trouvera dans ces pages une réponse plus que satisfaisante.

The Long Revolution

Studying the slow swap that has formed the political, monetary, and cultural lifetime of the 20 th century, socialist philosopher Raymond Williams offers fascinating arguments that stay timely for modern readers. during this new version of the vintage textual content, Williams’ research of schooling and the clicking lines the improvement of a standard language, revealing hyperlinks among principles, literary kinds, and social heritage.

The Politics of Size: Perspectives from the Fat Acceptance Movement

Our society is body-size obsessed. the end result? an atmosphere the place "fat humans" are always avoided and mentioned disparagingly at the back of their backs. even supposing fats humans generally endure the brunt of the institutionalized oppression round being outsized, pervasive closeminded attitudes approximately physique measurement in the USA have an effect on all people of all sizes—from people who find themselves shamed for being too skinny to these whose lives revolve round the worry of turning into fats.

Extra info for The Sociology Book (Big Ideas Simply Explained)

Example text

And inner-city neighborhoods in the 1990s continued to house a disproportionate share of the nation’s (overwhelmingly minority) poor and unemployed and to suffer from a disproportionate share of social ills like drug abuse and crime. S. cities in race-neutral terms is to tell only half, or less than half, the story of what has happened to our urban centers. Suburbanization and the ensuing balkanization of our metropolitan areas had and continues to have pronounced racial overtones. A disproportionate number of the families leaving the cities at the height of the postwar exodus were of European descent.

No doubt this reaction was at least partially rooted in suburbia’s culture of privatism and anti-urbanism. And no doubt it stemmed in part from perfectly understandable concerns about the real and sometimes brutal criminality that often plagues oppressed urban communities. However, I contend that the panic over the city was neither a simple reXex of the suburban mentality nor a realistic response to a genuine threat; rather, it was created, fueled, and organized by a right-wing discourse on the “urban crisis” that supplied an ideological framework and a set of ideologically laden concepts for interpreting conditions in the inner city, one which both ampliWed suburban fears and gave them a decidedly reactionary spin.

Historically, poverty in America has been more of a rural phenomenon than an urban one. 2 percent (see Table 5). By 1979, the poverty rate in the cities had risen to more than double that in the suburbs and has been roughly twice the suburban rate ever since (see Table 5). The situation has been particularly dire in declining industrial centers like Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, and St. S. ). One study after another attests to the fact that the nation’s poor population is now disproportionately concentrated in the urban core.

Download PDF sample

Rated 4.20 of 5 – based on 35 votes