Sociology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 35
Page 230
... Jewish community , here and elsewhere , is a strong sense of peoplehood , a deep emotion- al identification with Jewish history and with one another . Urbanites and entrepreneurs through much of their past , Jews adapted to America with ...
... Jewish community , here and elsewhere , is a strong sense of peoplehood , a deep emotion- al identification with Jewish history and with one another . Urbanites and entrepreneurs through much of their past , Jews adapted to America with ...
Page 358
... Jews to leave their European homelands . And Israel exerted pull - the emotional appeal of a tradi- tional homeland ; its attraction as an existing independent nation for Jews ; and its open immigration policy . Immigration patterns ...
... Jews to leave their European homelands . And Israel exerted pull - the emotional appeal of a tradi- tional homeland ; its attraction as an existing independent nation for Jews ; and its open immigration policy . Immigration patterns ...
Page 489
... Jews marry non - Jews . Had the census figures distinguished be- tween black and white Protestants , the in- termarriage rates for blacks would have been extremely low ; for whites they probably would have approached those for Catholics ...
... Jews marry non - Jews . Had the census figures distinguished be- tween black and white Protestants , the in- termarriage rates for blacks would have been extremely low ; for whites they probably would have approached those for Catholics ...
Contents
SCIENCE AND METHODS IN SOCIOLOGY | 21 |
PART | 64 |
THE ELEMENTS OF CULTURE | 70 |
Copyright | |
43 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
adults Ameri American attitudes become believe birth rate boys Bureaucracy chapter Chicago child cities collective behavior conflict crime crowd culture Daniel Yankelovich develop deviant earn economic Emile Durkheim encounter groups Erving Goffman ethnic example experience feel female Free Press Georg Simmel girls goals human income individual institutions live male Margaret Mead marriage Max Weber means ment million mobility modern mothers nomic norms occupational organizations parents patterns percent person police political poor population poverty President prison problems progressive tax race racial relations relationships religion religious riots Robert Stoller rules sex roles sexual Siriono social class social structure society sociologists Sociology status stratification subculture theory tion total institutions traditional urban values woman women workers York young