Michael Burawoy has helped to reshape the theory and practice of sociology across the Western world. Public Sociology is his most thoroughgoing attempt to explore what a truly committed, engaged sociology should look like in the twenty-first century.

Burawoy looks back on the defining moments of his intellectual journey, exploring his pivotal early experiences as a researcher, such as his fieldwork in a Zambian copper mine and a Chicago factory. He recounts his time as a graduate and professor during the ideological ferment in sociology departments of the 1970s, and explores how his experiences intersected with a changing political and intellectual world up to the present. Recalling Max Weber, Burawoy argues that sociology is much more than just a discipline - it is a vocation, to be practiced everywhere and by everyone.



Autorentext
Michael Burawoy is a professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

Inhalt
List of Tables

Preface



Introduction The Promise of Sociology



Part One: Theory and Practice

1. Theory: Utopia and Anti-Utopia

2. Practice: The (Di)vision of Sociological Labor



Part Two: Policy Sociology

3. The Language Question in University Education

4. Job Evaluation in a Racial Order



Part Three: Public Sociology

5. The Color of Class

6. Student Rebellion



Part Four: Critical Sociology

7. Race, Class and Colonialism

8. Migrant Labor and the State

9. Manufacturing Consent

10. Racial Capitalism



Part Five: Professional Sociology

11. Advancing a Research Program

12. Painting Socialism

13. The Great Involution



Part Six: Real Utopias

14. Third-Wave Marketization

15. Whither the Public University?

16. Living Theory



Conclusion: Biography Meets History



Notes

References

Index
Titel
Public Sociology
EAN
9781509519187
Format
E-Book (epub)
Hersteller
Veröffentlichung
08.09.2021
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
0.38 MB
Anzahl Seiten
232