Sociology: Exploring the Architecture of Everyday Life, Brief EditionIn this Second Brief Edition of Sociology: Exploring the Architecture of Everyday Life, David M. Newman takes students inside today's pressing sociological issues and shows them how the compelling events on their minds today—such as the current economic recession and the Obama presidency—relate to enduring sociological concepts. Throughout the new edition, Newman introduces students to the fascinating world of sociology, using current real-world examples and personal observations that help them understand how sociology affects them. |
Contents
01Newman 2ePart I46370 | 1 |
02Newman 2e46370 | 9 |
03Newman 2ePartII46370 | 23 |
04Newman 2e46370 | 43 |
05Newman 2e46370 | 57 |
06Newman 2e46370 | 71 |
07Newman 2e46370 | 83 |
08Newman 2e46370 | 103 |
10Newman 2e46370 | 139 |
11Newman 2e46370 | 161 |
12Newman 2e46370 | 183 |
13Newman 2e46370 | 201 |
14Newman 2e46370 | 215 |
15GloNewman 2e46370 | 233 |
16RefNewman 2e46370 | 241 |
277 | |
Other editions - View all
Sociology: Exploring the Architecture of Everyday Life, Brief Edition David M. Newman No preview available - 2010 |
Common terms and phrases
African Americans Asian Americans become behavior beliefs Census Chapter child cited countries create crime culture defined developed deviance discrimination divorce drug earn economic endogamy ethnic ethnoracial everyday female gender global groups human identity immigrants income increased individuals inequality influence instance institutional racism interaction labor Latino/as less lives male marriage married ment million National Native Americans norms organizations parents people's Pew Research Center political poor poverty poverty line Press problems race racial racism rape reality relationships religious Retrieved June Retrieved September role sexism sexual social class social institutions social structure sociological sociological imagination sociologists Statistics status stratification structural-functionalist symbolic interactionism tion Tutsi U.S. Bureau U.S. Census Bureau United University values victims violence Washington women workers York York Times Magazine