
Culture, Power, and History
Studies in Critical Sociology
Brill (Publisher)
Published on 28. October 2005
Book
Hardback
564 pages
978-90-04-14659-4 (ISBN)
Description
This volume brings together theoretical meditations and empirical studies of the intersection of culture, power and history in social life. New strategies for marketing and advertising to children, the production of gendered subjectivity in maquiladora factories, the racialized economic history of the construction of the Chicago School of sociology, and the normalization of cosmetic plastic surgery in contemporary America-these are some of the crossroads under investigation here, where cultural meanings and practices are set against historical landscapes of power.
Included are contributions from William Gamson, Juliet Schor, Stephen Pfohl, Arthur and Marilouise Kroker, Jackie Orr, Leslie Salzinger, Eva Garroutte, Davarian Baldwin, Ramon Grosfoguel, Charlotte Ryan, Danielle Egan, Charles Sarno, Steve Farough, Karen McCorkmack, Abigail Brooks, Aimee Van Wagenen and William Wood.
Included are contributions from William Gamson, Juliet Schor, Stephen Pfohl, Arthur and Marilouise Kroker, Jackie Orr, Leslie Salzinger, Eva Garroutte, Davarian Baldwin, Ramon Grosfoguel, Charlotte Ryan, Danielle Egan, Charles Sarno, Steve Farough, Karen McCorkmack, Abigail Brooks, Aimee Van Wagenen and William Wood.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Leiden
Netherlands
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 245 mm
Width: 167 mm
Thickness: 41 mm
Weight
2173 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-04-14659-4 (9789004146594)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions
Stephen Pfohl | Aimee Van Wagenen | Patricia Arend
Culture, Power, and History
Studies in Critical Sociology
Software
12/2005
Brill
Unfortunately, price unknown
Available (delivery time upon request)
Persons
Patricia Arend is a Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology at Boston College. Her areas of interest are gender, race, class, sexuality, consumption and social theory. Her dissertation examines "white weddings" in consumer society.
Abigail Brooks is a Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology at Boston College. Her areas of interest include feminist theory, sociology of gender, critical gerontology and feminist age studies, sociology of the body, science and technology studies, and social theory. Her dissertation investigates women's lived experiences and interpretations of growing older against the contextual backdrop of growing prevalence, acceptance, and approval of cosmetic surgery.
Denise Leckenby is a Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology at Boston College. Her areas of interest include qualitative methodology, feminist methodology, feminist theory, and sexuality. She is coeditor of Women in Catholic Higher Education: Border Work, Living Experiences, and Social Justice (2003).
Stephen Pfohl is a Professor of Sociology and Chairperson of the Sociology Department at Boston College. He is the author of a wide variety of books and articles on topics ranging from the politics of deviance and social control to studies in social theory and contemporary culture. Pfohl's books include Death at the Parasite Cafe (1992) and Images of Deviance and Social Control (1994). Stephen is also a Past-President of the Society for the Study of Social Problems.
Aimee Van Wagenen is a Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology at Boston College. Her dissertation investigates identity, public health and power in the science and practice of HIV prevention and education.
Abigail Brooks is a Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology at Boston College. Her areas of interest include feminist theory, sociology of gender, critical gerontology and feminist age studies, sociology of the body, science and technology studies, and social theory. Her dissertation investigates women's lived experiences and interpretations of growing older against the contextual backdrop of growing prevalence, acceptance, and approval of cosmetic surgery.
Denise Leckenby is a Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology at Boston College. Her areas of interest include qualitative methodology, feminist methodology, feminist theory, and sexuality. She is coeditor of Women in Catholic Higher Education: Border Work, Living Experiences, and Social Justice (2003).
Stephen Pfohl is a Professor of Sociology and Chairperson of the Sociology Department at Boston College. He is the author of a wide variety of books and articles on topics ranging from the politics of deviance and social control to studies in social theory and contemporary culture. Pfohl's books include Death at the Parasite Cafe (1992) and Images of Deviance and Social Control (1994). Stephen is also a Past-President of the Society for the Study of Social Problems.
Aimee Van Wagenen is a Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology at Boston College. Her dissertation investigates identity, public health and power in the science and practice of HIV prevention and education.
Content
1. Culture, Power, and History: An Introduction, Stephen Pfohl and Aimee Van Wagenen
2. Culture "Under the Knife and Proud of It:" An Analysis of the Normalization of Cosmetic Surgery, Abigail
Brooks
3. "What Are You Lookin' At?" The Oppositional Gaze, Intersectionality, and the Social Geographies of White
Masculinities, Steven D. Farough
4. The Commodification of Childhood: Tales from the Advertising Front Lines, Juliet B. Schor
5. Movement Impact on Cultural Change, William A. Gamson
6. On the Place of Allegory in the Methodological Conventions of a Critical Sociology: A Case Study of Max
Weber's
7. Protestant Ethic, Charles Sarno
8. An Epistemology of Haunting, Aimee Van Wagenen
9. Defining "Radical Indigenism" and Creating an American Indian Scholarship, Eva Marie Garroutte
10. Power Eyeing the Scene: The Uses and (RE)uses of Surveillance Cameras in an Exotic Dance Club, R.
Danielle Egan
11. To Build a More Perfect Discipline: Ideologies of the Normative and the Social Control of the Criminal Innocent in the Policing of New York City, Delario Lindsey
12. Resisting the Welfare Mother: The Power of Welfare Discourse and Tactics of Resistance, Karen
McCormack
13. From Gender as Object to Gender as Verb: Rethinking How Global Restructuring Happens, Leslie
Salzinger
14. Viral Power: An Interview by William Wood, Arthur and Marilouise Kroker
15. History Black Belts and Ivory Towers: The Place of Race in U.S. Social Thought, 1892-1948, Davarian L.
Baldwin
16. The Militarization of Inner Space, Jackie Orr
17. It Takes a Movement to Raise an Issue: Media Lessons from the 1997 U.P.S. Strike, Charlotte Ryan
(Virtual) Myths, William R. Wood
18. Geopolitics of Knowledge and Coloniality of Power: Thinking Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans from the Colonial Difference, Ramon Grosfoguel
References
About the Authors and Editors
2. Culture "Under the Knife and Proud of It:" An Analysis of the Normalization of Cosmetic Surgery, Abigail
Brooks
3. "What Are You Lookin' At?" The Oppositional Gaze, Intersectionality, and the Social Geographies of White
Masculinities, Steven D. Farough
4. The Commodification of Childhood: Tales from the Advertising Front Lines, Juliet B. Schor
5. Movement Impact on Cultural Change, William A. Gamson
6. On the Place of Allegory in the Methodological Conventions of a Critical Sociology: A Case Study of Max
Weber's
7. Protestant Ethic, Charles Sarno
8. An Epistemology of Haunting, Aimee Van Wagenen
9. Defining "Radical Indigenism" and Creating an American Indian Scholarship, Eva Marie Garroutte
10. Power Eyeing the Scene: The Uses and (RE)uses of Surveillance Cameras in an Exotic Dance Club, R.
Danielle Egan
11. To Build a More Perfect Discipline: Ideologies of the Normative and the Social Control of the Criminal Innocent in the Policing of New York City, Delario Lindsey
12. Resisting the Welfare Mother: The Power of Welfare Discourse and Tactics of Resistance, Karen
McCormack
13. From Gender as Object to Gender as Verb: Rethinking How Global Restructuring Happens, Leslie
Salzinger
14. Viral Power: An Interview by William Wood, Arthur and Marilouise Kroker
15. History Black Belts and Ivory Towers: The Place of Race in U.S. Social Thought, 1892-1948, Davarian L.
Baldwin
16. The Militarization of Inner Space, Jackie Orr
17. It Takes a Movement to Raise an Issue: Media Lessons from the 1997 U.P.S. Strike, Charlotte Ryan
(Virtual) Myths, William R. Wood
18. Geopolitics of Knowledge and Coloniality of Power: Thinking Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans from the Colonial Difference, Ramon Grosfoguel
References
About the Authors and Editors