Down to Earth Sociology: Introductory ReadingsDown to Earth Sociology, Ninth Edition, continues to open new windows onto the complex social realities that shape our world as it provides a firm foundation for exploring the discipline of sociology and the dynamic principles underlying society itself. Thoroughly revised and expanded, the Ninth Edition includes a number of exceptional new readings: Deborah Tannen on the differing communication styles of men and women; George Ritzer on the "McDonaldization" of society; Arthur J. Vidich and Joseph Bensman on resistance to social change; James M. Jasper and Dorothy Nelkin on the animal rights movement; Patricia Yancey Martin and Robert A. Hummer on fraternities and rape on campus, and Arturo Madrid on changes in racial-ethnic relations. Together with thirteen essential new articles, classic contributions from C. Wright Mills, Elliot Liebow, Arlie Hochschild, Jonathan Kozol, among many others, emphasize participant observation - which gives students a sense of "being there" by using expert firsthand reporting. Henslin's forty-seven selections highlight the most significant themes of contemporary sociology, ranging from the sociology of gender, power, politics, sports, and religion, to the contemporary crises of violent crime, poverty, homelessness, and AIDS. Down to Earth Sociology includes a unique Correlation Chart that ties every article to related chapters in the thirty-eight most widely used introductory textbooks. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 83
Page 107
... individual , observers can glean clues from his conduct and appearance which allow them to apply their previous experience with individuals roughly similar to the one before them or , more important , to apply untested stereotypes to ...
... individual , observers can glean clues from his conduct and appearance which allow them to apply their previous experience with individuals roughly similar to the one before them or , more important , to apply untested stereotypes to ...
Page 110
... individual will be calculating in his activity but be relatively un- aware that this is the case . Sometimes he will intentionally and consciously ex- press himself in a particular way , but chiefly because the traditions of his group ...
... individual will be calculating in his activity but be relatively un- aware that this is the case . Sometimes he will intentionally and consciously ex- press himself in a particular way , but chiefly because the traditions of his group ...
Page 111
... individual's con- duct , he can gain much by controlling it . The others of course may sense that the individual is manipulating the presumably spontaneous aspects of his be- havior , and seek in this very act of manipulation some ...
... individual's con- duct , he can gain much by controlling it . The others of course may sense that the individual is manipulating the presumably spontaneous aspects of his be- havior , and seek in this very act of manipulation some ...
Common terms and phrases
activities American Amish asked become beef plant behavior body Bohemian Grove boys child Cornerville crime culture definition develop Erving Goffman example experience eyes feel female fraternity friends gender girls HIV disease home shopping home shopping hosts human individual interaction jail lives look Mad Lib male means Milgram moral Nacirema name taboo norms Old Order Amish organization participant observation patient percent person physical play police political prisoners problem pseudopatients question rape rapists relationships Rerebawa rituals role Roughnecks Saints says sense sexual sexual scripts share shock situation social class society sociological imagination sociologists sociology someone Stanley Milgram strangers street talk teacher things tion told victim village woman women workers Yanomamö young