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         Cultural Things Sociology:     more books (80)
  1. A Very Serious Thing: Women's Humor and American Culture (American Culture Series) by Nancy Walker, 1988-10
  2. Things
  3. The Value of Things by N Cummings, Lewandowska, et all 2000-12-01
  4. Biographical Objects: How Things Tell the Stories of Peoples' Lives by Janet Hoskins, 1998-05-11
  5. The Oral and Beyond: Doing Things with Words in Africa by Ruth Finnegan, 2007-10-01
  6. The Underneath of Things: Violence, History, and the Everyday in Sierra Leone by Mariane Ferme, 2001-09-03
  7. Things Chinese and Their Stories by Du Feibao, Hong Su, 1994-12
  8. The Socialness of Things: Essays on the Socio-Semiotics of Objects (Approaches to Semiotics)
  9. Grasping Things: Folk Material Culture and Mass Society in America by Simon J. Bronner, 2004-12-14
  10. Valuing Ancient Things: Archaeology and Law by John Carman, 1996-06
  11. Living with Things: Ridding, Accommodation, Dwelling by Nicky Gregson, 2007-02-15
  12. Rallying The Really Human Things: Moral Imagination In Politics, Literature, and Everyday Life by Vigen Guroian, 2005-05-30
  13. First Things: Reading the Maternal Imaginary by Mary Jacobus, 1995-12-20
  14. Minoritized Space: An Inquiry into the Spatial Order of Things by Michel S. Laguerre, 1999-03

21. Interested In A Phd ? - Sociology At Lancaster University
helping to remake sociology and cultural studies in a wide variety of areas . If you are planning to do a PhD full time, so long as things are going
http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fss/sociology/prospective/phd/intro.htm
Skip Links Access/General info Site Map County College South, Lancaster University, LA1 4YD, UK
Tel: +44 (0) 1524 594177 Fax: +44 (0) 1524 594256 E-mail: Home Prospective Applicants PhD Interested?
Interested in a PhD?
John Law writes ...
The Sociology Department is an exciting research-oriented centre. Its staff, together with those in related departments and centres such as Women's Studies, Science Studies, the Institute for Cultural Research, the Institute for Health Research, and the Institute for Environment, Philosophy and Public Policy are helping to remake sociology and cultural studies in a wide variety of areas. The department is international in scope with staff and students from more than thirteen countries. The quality of the research is reflected in the RAE rating: yet again (December 2001) Lancaster has achieved the the highest 5* rating. But the excitement is not simply a statistical exercise! Most visitors immediately sense that Lancaster is a real social science powerhouse with exciting researchers and exciting research projects, seminars, and lectures! Many visitors also sense that hierarchy and rank are much less important to us that ideas, debate and research. There is a very unusual 'Lancaster culture'. As a part of this there are numerous

22. RFI - Syllabus: Intro To Sociology
Universals; Animals Culture; Globalization and cultural Destruction. the silly sociology that people use to rationalize dumb things they want to do.
http://critcrim.org/redfeather/learningcircus/syll001.htm
TR YOUNG: INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY Spring, '97
  • ABOUT THIS COURSE. Sociology is the study of symbolically created relationships. Social relationships are activated within social occasions. Social occasions are activated within social institutions. We will consider how much of human behavior is organized within such relationships; within such occasions; within social institutions.
  • TEXT: SOCIOLOGY: Down to Earth by Jim Henslin
  • SCHEDULE: Meetings: 9:05-9:55 MWF: Williams 301
    Lectures:
    15 Jan. Wed.
    Introduction to Course: PARADIGMS LOST: PARADIGMS FOUND. Read Ch. 1 in Henslin. Learn any 5 concepts; learn any five names of great sociologists!!!
    17 Jan. Fri.
    22 Jan. Wed.
    24 Jan. Fri.
    27 Jan. Mon.
    SOCIALIZATION: Human Nature; Mind, Self and Society; Race, Gender, Ethnicity: Who Am I? Agents of Socialization. 29 Jan. Wed. 31 Jan. Fri. February: 3 Feb. Mon. Symbolic Interaction and Symbolic Social-Life worlds. Five Interpersonal Media; Dramaturgical Analysis; Ethnomethodology: Reality Creating/Interpreting processes in mass societies. 4 Feb: Movie Lab # 1: Boyzn'theHood See List of Basic Concepts posted in Hall.
  • 23. Sociology 120 - Cross-Cultural Aging
    sociology 120 Library Assignment Cross-cultural Aging SIRS also defaultsto a basic search, but this time things are a little different.
    http://library.ccc.cccd.edu/soc120.htm
    SOCIOLOGY 120
    Library Assignment - Cross-Cultural Aging MLA Style Manual Prescott College, The Library. This site provides a quick reference for Modern Language Association (MLA) style for documenting sources. http://library.prescott.edu/mla.html The welfare and care of aging individuals is an issue worldwide. Attitudes toward, and treatment of, older adults differs throughout the world depending upon many factors: historic, economic, geographic, and cultural. Use the Coastline Virtual Library ( http://library.ccc.cccd.edu ) to find and review a minimum of five (5) articles that provide information about attitudes and treatment of older adults in at least two different countries/cultures. Articles may include information about the health status of elders in these countries or cultures. You may use the following suggested approaches to beginning your search. In the searches suggested below, you will notice that different search terms are used for each resource. That is because a librarian did not create the indexes and topic designations; each vendor has organized the entries according to its assumptions about the database’s users.

    24. Cultural Studies Central
    It s the things we use and the people we talk about. A new, insurgent siteproduced by the sociology department of UC Riverside. Wonderful!
    http://www.culturalstudies.net/
    introduction
    commentary

    analysis

    web projects
    ...
    about the author
    Key Meeting Places:
    The CULTSTUD-L Discussion List

    Popcultures.com:

    Sarah Zupko's Cultural Studies Center
    Welcome to www.culturalstudies.net This is our new home! Many more changes, additions, and innovations are coming this summer. Don't touch that back button! The CSC Reading Room is open again.
    (Please go to http://www.washtech.org/day2/index.html for information on how to help the Amazon.com customer support workers.) Once the Reading Room is open, we will begin to add the following:
  • Growth from one to several to many booksellers, large and small. We will also have links to books in the public domain. We have no plans to leave Amazon, but do wish our surfers to pay attention to the situations of workers in ALL e-commerce companies.
  • We will very soon have reading groups dedicated to individual books with threaded discussions associated with each group. This will be the central and most important content of The Reading Room
  • And we'll see what else . . .
    Welcome!
  • 25. The Cultural Turn In American Sociology Ñ A Report From The Field
    things go better with culture. First, I would want to make clear that cultural cultural sociology is that project which seeks to track the way that
    http://www.soc.ucsb.edu/projects/ct/pages/JWM/Papers/Chair's Letter.htm

    26. Sociology And Cultural Studies | Course Finder | University Of Salford - A Great
    sociology is the study of society, and investigates, among other things, The sociology and cultural Studies degree at Salford is a major/minor programme
    http://www.salford.ac.uk/course-finder/course/151
    Skip to the content Help / Accessibility Statement Search for:
    • University Home Study at Salford Course Finder You are in: Home Course Finder / Course Details
      BSc (Hons) Sociology and Cultural Studies
      Key Facts
      Duration
      Three years full-time
      Entry requirements
      • Advanced GCE level: usually CCD or 220 UCAS points (which must include two 'A' levels with appropriate subject or grade) VCE A level/ Double award: 220 points BTEC ND/NC: eight merits and two distinctions Irish Leaving Certificates: 300 points Scottish Highers: BBBCC IB: 27 points A/AS level: 16 points (CCD at A level) Advanced GNVQ: merit plus A level grade C or relevant additional units
      Applications are welcomed from students of all ages and backgrounds. There is an established practice of admitting mature students and those with relevant experience or qualifications other than A levels. Previous experience of studying sociology of cultural studies is not a pre-requisite for entry into this degree programme.
      Course code
      L3V0 BSc/SCS
      Contact:
      Alex Farrell
      Tel:
      Fax:
      E-mail:
      a.l.farrell@salford.ac.uk

    27. Contemporary Books On Social Ecological-Evolutionary Theory
    Emics and Etics; The Nature of cultural things; Science, Objectivity, Morality A general sociology text written from a comparative, historical,
    http://www.faculty.rsu.edu/~felwell/Theorists/Lenski/other.htm
    Contemporary Ecological-Evolutionary Books: The following books each espouse a variant of ecological-evolutionary theory. While they may differ in the details, each demonstrates the power of the ecological-evolutionary theory in furthering our understanding of sociocultural systems and change. Guns, Germs, and Steel Book Description:
    Winner of the Pulitzer Prize. In this "artful, informative, and delightful" (William H. McNeill, New York Review of Books) book, Jared Diamond convincingly argues that geographical and environmental factors shaped the modern world. Societies that had had a head start in food production advanced beyond the hunter-gatherer stage, and then developed religion as well as nasty germs and potent weapons of war and adventured on sea and land to conquer and decimate preliterate cultures. A major advance in our understanding of human societies, Guns, Germs, and Steel chronicles the way that the modern world came to be and stunningly dismantles racially based theories of human history. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science, the Rhone-Poulenc Prize, and the Commonwealth club of California's Gold Medal. Editorial Reviews:
    "An ambitious, highly important book."

    28. Dr Don Slater
    His work on sociology of economic life includes Consumer Culture and cultural Economies (2002) London Sage. Making things real ethics and order on
    http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/sociology/whoswho/slater.htm
    Home Help Search Site index ... LSE for You You are here - Welcome to LSE Department of Sociology Who's who Academic staff
    Dr Don Slater
    Some major publications Don Slater joined the LSE as a Reader in Sociology in January 2001. After taking his BA and Ph.D from Cambridge (Social and Political Sciences) and spending several years in publishing, photography and community arts, he taught in the Department of Sociology, Goldsmiths College, University of London, from 1987 till 2001. Don Slater's work focuses on the relations between culture and economy, and falls into three broad areas: the sociology of economic life (in particular, consumer culture and market society); the sociology of the Internet and new media; and visual sociology (particularly photography and advertising). This work has been informed by a commitment to empirical (particularly ethnographic) research, to historical research, to critical traditions within modern social theory, and to interdisciplinary study and collaboration. His work on sociology of economic life includes Consumer Culture and Modernity (Polity: 1997) and Market Society: Markets and Modern Social Thought , with Dr Fran Tonkiss (Polity: 2001); and a special issue of

    29. Sociology & Cultural Studies - Subject Resources - Library - La Trobe University
    Department of Arts sociology, Politics and Culture - La Trobe University,Bendigo campus SocioWeb - index of links to all things sociological
    http://www.lib.latrobe.edu.au/help/subject-res/ben/sociology.php
    Library
    Services for... Useful Information

    30. Consumer Culture Noticeboard
    Alt, JD (1977) Leisure, Labor and Consumption a critical sociology of Appadurai, A. (1986) The Social Life of things Commodities in cultural
    http://homepages.gold.ac.uk/slater/consumer/biblioa.htm
    consumer culture bibliography This bibliography contains about 1,500 references on consumer culture drawn from my personal database. It therefore reflects my own interests (social theory, economic sociology and history, leisure, advertising and marketing). Also check out the bibliographies on market society and on internet culture. Please email me any errors or omissions. The current list was generated on 2 May 1999. You can download the whole bibliography as a single zip file, either as a text file or a Word97 file A B C ... Z
    A
    Abercrombie, N., S. Hill, et al. (1986) Sovereign Individuals of Capitalism Abrams, M. (1959) The Teenage Consumer Ackroyd, P. (1979) Dressing Up , Londno: Thames and Hudson. Adburgham, A. (1979) Shopping in Style: London from the restoration to Edwardian elegance , London: Thames and Hudson.

    31. RedNova News - Science - Civics As Applied Sociology
    THIS ARTICLE EXPLORES THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN APPLIED sociology AND democracy.1 Thosewho 1964 The Nature of cultural things. New York Random House.
    http://www.rednova.com/news/science/67086/civics_as_applied_sociology/
    ANDP("ntn"); Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_xp1='';Ads_yp1='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';Ads_cnturl='';Ads_sec=0;Ads_channels='';
    SPECIAL NEWS
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    Space Science Technology Health ... Video News
    REDNOVA EXTRAS
    RedNova E-Mail My RedNova Join RedNova RSS Feeds ... Tell A Friend, Win $500 Ads by Google Posted on: Wednesday, 23 June 2004, 06:00 CDT E-mail this to a friend Printable version Discuss this story in the forum Change Font Size: A A A
    Civics As Applied Sociology
    In a related manner, as I continue to deepen my understanding of the history of our field, it becomes increasingly clear that from the very beginning sociology was conceived as a technology as much as a science (Weinstein, 1981). The development of sociology and the related social sciences from the cradle of classic moral philosophy and political economy was clearly driven by an attempt to apply scientific knowledge to improve human relations. Indeed, the idea that sociological insight and method ought to guide social behavior in matters of democratic governance and in civil society generally is hardly novel. Comte and the other founders clearly had this purpose in view, as we will discuss presently. The sociologist/planner Sir Patrick Geddes made this case as succinctly as anyone has ever done in a speech delivered in 1904 to the Sociological Society in London. In it, Geddes argued that when put into practice the findings of sociology provide the most rational and most democratic foundation for the conduct of human affairs. As stated in the title of his speech, which I have appropriated for this essay, we should therefore consider "Civics as Applied Sociology."2 Moreover, it is no coincidence that the intellectual movements that propelled sociology from its philosophical roots to its status as a serious, albeit unusual, academic discipline in its own right occurred during the great age of democratic revolution in Europe and North America.

    32. Sociology Links
    cultural Studies Central natural mix of literary, sociological, ResearchResources for the Social Sciences a variety of things for a variety of
    http://www.centenary.edu/sociology/links
    If you can read this message, your browser likely does not support web standards. Though you will be able to use this site, you will not see the site as intended. Centenary Sociology Links
    Sociology Links
    Criminology/Deviance
    Culture
    • Cultural Studies Central natural mix of literary, sociological, and anthropological approaches. The Urban Legends Archives a nice source of urban folklore (remember the story of the lady who tried to dry her wet poodle in the microwave? never happened!)

    33. What Is Anthropology
    cultural anthropologists are interested in such things as behaviors, beliefs, many things in common related fields, such as sociology and psychology.
    http://www.siue.edu/ANTHROPOLOGY/intro.htm
    Anthropology is the study of humans. Sounds simple, doesn’t it? In reality, anthropology is a very complex and dynamic field. The methods and theories of anthropology are continuously changed and refined as anthropologists gather and analyze new data and reanalyze old data.Anthropology is multidisciplinary, drawing from and contributing to fields ranging from evolutionary psychology to medicine to historical ecology. Anthropologists are employed in universities, government agencies, and private corporations. Others with degrees in anthropology apply their knowledge in careers ranging from fire fighters to lawyers. Whatever career one chooses, an understanding of humans and appreciation for other cultures are essential in a multiethnic society such as ours. We in the Department of Anthropology at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville believe that teaching these skills and other aspects of anthropology are fundamental to an undergraduate liberal arts program. What is more important than the study of humans? In the United States , four fields of anthropology are traditionally recognized.

    34. Karin Peterson
    My dissertation explored how marginalized cultural products (things like quilts, My background in the sociology of Culture has led me in a number of
    http://www.unca.edu/sociology/faculty/peterson.htm
    Department of Sociology
    University of North Carolina at Asheville Home Faculty Degree Requirements
    and Courses
    Karin Peterson Office: Office Phone: Office Hours: MW 1:45 - 3:45
    R 11:00 - 12:00 E-Mail Address: kpeterson@unca.edu Fax: Fall 2005 Courses:
    MWF 1:45 - 2:35 - ZH221
    TR 3:10 - 4:25 - ZH226
    Some Reading Packets for students (Chapters 1-7) located outside of office SOC 393.001 Popular Culture/High Culture
    TR 9:25 - 10:40 - CH231 SOC 465.001 Senior Symposium
    MW 4:10 - 5:25 - ZH221 Education: Ph.D., University of Virginia Diplôme d’études approfondies, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (Paris) Ma trise, Université de Paris V B.A., Randolph-Macon Woman’s College Personal Statement: I discovered sociology when I was an undergraduate at Randolph-Macon Woman’s College. My favorite book as an undergraduate was Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (much to the dismay of students in my classical social theory classes). I was intrigued with the idea that religious beliefs could be linked to economic behavior, so intrigued that I integrated the book into papers for other courses.

    35. Sociology And Cultural Studies :: University Of Sussex Undergraduate Prospectus
    During the first two years you combine the sociology and cultural studies courses,while in the final year you take specialised options from both areas of
    http://www.sussex.ac.uk/Units/publications/ugrad2006/degrees/Cultural studies/12
    @import url("/includes/css/standard.css"); @import url("/includes/css/main_menus.css"); @import url("/Units/publications/ugrad2006/style/ug06.css"); Home A-Z Index People Reference Contact us
    Undergraduate Prospectus 2006
    Home Life at Sussex Studying Finance ... Cultural studies
    Our degrees - how to choose your degree
    Degrees
    BA
    Anthropology and Cultural Studies Art History and Cultural Studies Drama Studies and Cultural Studies English and Cultural Studies ... Sociology and Cultural Studies
    Cultural studies
    Sociology and Cultural Studies
    BA, 3 years, UCAS: LRH9 See the core courses for information on Cultural studies and listings on the Sociology pages for more information on these courses. Core courses
    Year 1
    Histories of Culture covers the development of the concept of culture in the West and how this has affected our ideas about civilisation, difference and identity. Studying Culture/Cultural Studies considers a range of different approaches to studying culture and compares the cultural studies discipline with those of anthropologists, geographers, historians, literary and media specialists and musicians. Culture and the Everyday explores theories concerning people’s engagement with the world and the way in which culture operates in everyday life, using historical and cross-cultural examples.

    36. School Sociology: GCSE Questions
    Learn the vocabulary of sociology. • Learn the following lists of things Five ways in which people from another culture are different from us
    http://www.barrycomp.com/bhs/gcse_questions.htm
    School Sociology
    from Bryn Hafren and the Barry Sixth Form Quick Menu Site Contents New: Sept 2004 About the department Studying GCSE GCSE course info GCSE support materials GCSE revision starter pack Studying at A level AS/A2 course information AS/A2 support materials Empirical/interpretative research Links Bryn Hafren Study Guide Media Studies resources Home Contents GCSE support materials GCSE questions and revision topics Contents Learn the vocabulary of sociology lists of things practice questions for you to work out
    Learn the Vocabulary of Sociology
    These pages will offer you some words and meanings. Learn them off by heart. Get friends and family to test you if necessary. Show understanding by writing your own examples next to the words. Word Meaning Example Socialisation Is the process of learning how to behave Informal socialisation We are trained by friends and families Formal socialisation We are trained by people who set out to change us Nature theory We behave as we do because we are like animals Nurture theory We behave as we do because other people train us into this.

    37. Sociology Of Consumption: Social Practices - The Uses Of Things
    sociology of Consumption Social practices the uses of things. In contrast tomeanings of things, understanding consumer culture is a matter of social
    http://uk.geocities.com/balihar_sanghera/conpractices.html
    Sociology of Consumption: Social practices - the uses of things In contrast to meanings of things, understanding consumer culture is a matter of social rather than textual analysis. It is a matter of understanding the ways in which meanings of things are part of the making of social relations and social order. Consumption is part of the cultural reproduction of social relations, a concrete process carried out through social practices in mundane life. The social order of consumption practices Mary Douglas provides a Durkheimian concern with moral order and social classification. Douglas argues that the flow of goods through consumption rituals maps out and solidifies complex networks of social relationship. As communicators, goods are primarily ‘markers’ that indicate social relationships and classifications. Through the public meanings attached to goods and their public uses, consumption organises social order by making visible social divisions, categories, ranks and so on. In general, social meaning is shifting and unstable. To take an example, the box of chocolates and flowers on Women’s Day. The meanings and rituals of consumption mark out the categories and classifications that constitute the social order. Crucially, this approach, unlike semiotics, connects goods intrinsically to social contexts and relations, to practices.

    38. Signature Courses - WSU Sociology Department
    Topics covered include what is sociology, what is culture, Professor Rotolofeels that these skills are the most important things a student, sociology
    http://libarts.wsu.edu/soc/Sig_Courses.htm
    Washington State University Home
    SIGNATURE COURSES
    Sociology 101 - Introduction to Sociology
    Professor Lisa McIntyre
    Sociology 101 provides an introduction to sociology, including various sociological topics as well as a sociological way of viewing the world. Topics covered include: what is sociology, what is culture, how does deviance operate in society, and many others. The goal of the course is to show students the interconnectedness of things in society. The course shows students how they are constrained and empowered by society and the role that we all play in influencing society. Professor McIntyre presents these topics with a refreshing element of humor. This course is important to sociology majors because it introduces students to the basic vocabulary and points of view largely used in sociology. For non- sociology majors, the course is important because it teaches them the interconnectedness of society and their role in that social process. Professor McIntyre teaches this course in lecture format and provides students with a "lecture guide" that gives an overview of the material and offers optional study opportunities to make the material more easily understood.

    39. Alevel Links: Culutre And Identity
    to more wideranging material on things like Civil Rights in America, MartinLuther King and so forth. General sociology Links, Culture and Identity
    http://www.sociology.org.uk/lacult.htm
    A-Level Links Culture and Identity General What is Culture The Stanford Prison Experiment Part of the GenEd site, this particular part focuses on a range of topics related to all aspects of the concept of culture - from basic definitions, through areas such as high and low culture to current debates on the nature and significance of culture in American society. It's a site aimed at undergraduate level, so you may have to pick-and-choose your way through the available information. The hard-to-read "black-on-grey-paper" design notwithstanding (now, there's a cultural argument if ever I saw one...), this is site that's worth browsing. Better known to most people (especially after the recent TV programme) as the " Zimbardo Experiment " - which tried to discover, in the words of the site: " What happens when you put good people in an evil place? Does humanity win over evil, or does evil triumph?". The site is a neat mixture of informative text photographs and short video clips relating to the experiment (plus useful "discussion questions") which can be used as a teaching tool to stimulate discussion / exploration in a range of Specification areas.

    40. Larvatus Prodeo
    Blogging politics, culture, sociology and life from Brisvegas Anyway, one ofthe things I noticed is that the song ‘Shivers’ is played at least twice in
    http://larvatusprodeo.redrag.net/
    Larvatus Prodeo
    Blogging politics, culture, sociology and life from Brisvegas
    About the site

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