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Social Stratification, Class, Race, and Gender in Sociological Perspective, Second Edition: Class, Race, and Gender in Sociological Perspective 2nd edition [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 928 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm, weight: 1880 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Sep-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367287668
  • ISBN-13: 9780367287665
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  • Bibliotēkām
  • Formāts: Hardback, 928 pages, height x width: 254x178 mm, weight: 1880 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Sep-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367287668
  • ISBN-13: 9780367287665
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This book assembles classic and contemporary articles representing the major sociological approaches to understanding social inequality. Although there are various competing texts covering issues of social inequality, this book is the only comprehensive source of classic and contemporary articles that have defined and redefined the contours of the field. The introductory articles in each section of the book provide examples of the major research traditions in the field, while the concluding essays (commissioned by leading scholars) provide broader programmatic statements that identify current controversies and unresolved issues.. The field of stratification is being transformed and reshaped by advances in theory and quantitative modeling as well as by new approaches to the analysis of economic, racial, and gender inequality. Although these developments are revolutionary in their implications, until now there has been no comprehensive effort to bring together the classic articles that have defined the contours of the field. In this revised and updated second edition of Social Stratification , the history of stratification research unfolds in systematic fashion, with the introductory articles in each section providing examples of the major research traditions in the field and the concluding essays (commissioned from leading scholars) providing broader programmatic statements that identify current controversies and unresolved issues. This comprehensive reader is designed as a primary text for introductory courses on social stratification and as a supplementary text for advanced courses on occupations, labor markets, or social mobility. The field of stratification is being transformed and reshaped by advances in theory and quantitative modeling as well as by new approaches to the analysis of economic, racial, and gender inequality. Although these developments are revolutionary in their implications, until now there has been no comprehensive effort to bring together the classic and contemporary articles that define the contours of the field. In this revised and updated edition of Social Stratification, the history of stratification research unfolds in systematic fashion, with the introductory articles in each section providing examples of the major research traditions in the field and the concluding essays (commissioned from leading scholars) providing broader programmatic statements that identify current controversies and unresolved issues. The resulting collection of articles both celebrates the diversity of theoretical approaches and reveals the cumulative nature of ongoing research. This comprehensive reader is designed as a primary text for introductory courses on social stratification and as a supplementary text for advanced courses on social classes, occupations, labor markets, or social mobility. The following types of questions and debates are addressed in the six sections of the reader:Forms and Sources of Stratif ication: What are the major forms of inequality in human history? Can the ubiquity of inequality be attributed to individual differences in talent or ability? Is some form of inequality an inevitable feature of human life? The Structure of Contemporary Stratification: What are the principal fault lines or social cleavages that define the contemporary class structure? Have these cleavages strengthened or weakened with the transition to modernity and postmodernity? Generating Stratification: How frequently do individuals move into new classes, occupations, or income groups? Is there a permanent underclass? To what extent are occupational outcomes determined by such forces as intelligence, effort, schooling, aspirations, social contacts, and individual luck? The Consequences of Stratification: How are the life-styles, attitudes, and behaviors of individuals shaped by their class locations? Are there identifiable class cultures in past and present societies? Ascriptive Processes: What types of social processes and state policies serve to maintain or alter racial, ethnic, and sex discrimination in labor markets? Have these forms of discrimination weakened or strengthened with the transition to modernity and postmodernity The Future of Stratification: Will stratification systems take on completely new and distinctive forms in the future? How unequal will these systems be? Is the concept of social class still useful in describing postmodern forms of stratification? Are stratification systems gradually shedding their distinctive features and converging towards some common (i.e., postmodern) regime The volume offers essential reading for undergraduates who need an introduction to the field, for graduate students who wish to broaden their understanding of stratification research, and for advanced scholars who seek a basic reference guide. Although most of the selections are middle-range theoretical pieces suitable for introductory courses, the anthology also includes advanced contributions on the cutting edge of research. The editor outlines a modified study plan for undergraduate students requiring a basic introduction to the field.
Study Guide x
Preface and Acknowledgments xi
Part I Introduction
The Past, Present, and Future of Social Inequality
1(54)
David B. Grusky
Part II Forms and Sources of Stratification
The Functions of Stratification
Some Principles of Stratification
55(10)
Kingsley Davis
Wilbert E. Moore
The Dysfunctions of Stratification
Some Principles of Stratification: A Critical Analysis
65(8)
Melvin M. Tumin
Inequality by Design
73(4)
Claude S. Fischer
Michael Hout
Martin Sanchez Jankowski
Samuel R. Lucas
Ann Swidler
Kim Voss
Concluding Commentary to Part Two
New Light on Old Issues: The Relevance of "Really Existing Socialist Societies" for Stratification Theory
77(10)
Gerhard Lenski
Part III The Structure of Contemporary Stratification
Theories of Class Marx and Post-Marxists
Alienation and Social Classes
87(4)
Karl Marx
Classes in Capitalism and Pre-Capitalism
91(10)
Ideology and Class
101(2)
Value and Surplus Value
103(2)
Class and Class Conflict in Industrial Society
105(7)
Ralf Dahrendorf
Varieties of Marxist Conceptions of Class Structure
112(4)
Erik Olin Wright
A General Framework for the Analysis of Class Structure
116(13)
Class Conflict in the Capitalist World Economy
129(3)
Immanuel Wallerstein
Weber and Post-Weberians
Class, Status, Party
132(10)
Max Weber
Status Groups and Classes
142(4)
Open and Closed Relationships
146(4)
The Rationalization of Education and Training
150(2)
The Class Structure of the Advanced Societies
152(10)
Anthony Giddens
Marxism and Class Theory: A Bourgeois Critique
162(16)
Frank Parkin
Durkheim and Post-Durkbeimians
The Division of Labor in Society
178(5)
Emile Durkheim
Are There Big Social Classes?
183(12)
David B. Grusky
Jesper B. Sørensen
The Ruling Class and Elites Classic Statements
The Ruling Class
195(7)
Gaetano Mosca
The Power Elite
202(10)
C. Wright Mills
Elites and Power
212(4)
Anthony Giddens
Contemporary Elites In "Mass Society," Capitalism, And Post-Capitalism
The Political Class in the Age of Mass Society: Collectivistic Liberalism and Social Democracy
216(7)
Edward A. Shils
The Inner Circle
223(10)
Michael Useem
Post-Communist Managerialism
233(7)
Gil Eyal
Ivan Szelenyi
Eleanor Townsley
Gradational Status Groupings Reputation, Deference, and Prestige
Social Class in America
240(7)
W. Lloyd Warner
Marchia Meeker
Kenneth Eells
Deference
247(8)
Edward Shils
Occupational Hierarchies Classic Statements
Measuring the Status of Occupations
255(5)
Peter M. Blau
Otis Dudley Duncan
Andrea Tyree
Occupational Prestige in Comparative Perspective
260(4)
Donald J. Treiman
Occupational Grading and Occupational Prestige
264(7)
John H. Goldthorpe
Keith Hope
Prestige or Socioeconomic Scales in the Study of Occupational Achievement!
271(2)
David L. Featherman
Robert M. Hauser
Are Socioeconomic Scales Obselete?
The Measurement of Occupational Status
273(8)
Robert W. Hodge
Socioeconomic Indexes for Occupations: A Review, Update, and Critique
281(6)
Robert M. Hauser
John Robert Warren
Concluding Commentary to Part Three
The Basic Concepts of Stratification Research: Class, Status, and Power
287(16)
Aage B. Sorensen
Part IV Generating inequality
Social Mobility Classical Viewpoints
Social and Cultural Mobility
303(6)
Pitirim A. Sorokin
Social Mobility in Industrial Society
309(10)
Seymour Martin Lipset
Reinhard Bendix
Hans L. Zetterberg
Sponsored and Contest Mobility and the School System
319(6)
Ralph H. Turner
Modern Analyses of Class Mobility
A Refined Model of Occupational Mobility
325(11)
David L. Featherman
Robert M. Hauser
Comparative Social Mobility Revisited: Models of Convergence and Divergence in 16 Countries
336(8)
David B. Grusky
Robert M. Hauser
Trends in Class Mobility: The Post-War European Experience
344(29)
Robert Erikson
John H. Goldthorpe
Modem Analyses of Income Mobility and Poverty Spells
Inequality, Income Growth, and Mobility: The Basic Facts
373(5)
Peter Gottschalk
The Dynamics and Intergenerational Transmission of Poverty and Welfare Participation
378(12)
Peter Gottschalk
Sara Mclanahan
Gary D. Sandefur
Status and Income Attainment Basic Models
The Process of Stratification
390(13)
Peter M. Blau
Otis Dudley Duncan
Andrea Tyree
Inequality: A Reassessment of the Effect of Family and Schooling in America
403(7)
Christopher Jencks
Marshall Smith
Henry Acland
Mary Jo Bane
David Cohen
Herbert Gintis
Barbara Heyns
Stephan Michelson
Social Psychological Models
The Educational and Early Occupational Attainment Process
410(11)
William H. Sewell
Archibald O. Haller
Alejandro Portes
Ain't No Makin' It: Leveled Aspirations in a Low-income Neighborhood
421(14)
Jay Macleod
The "New Structuralism"
The Dual Labor Market: Theory and Implications
435(3)
Michael J. Piore
An Outline of a Theory of the Matching of Persons to Jobs
438(9)
Aage B. Sørensen
Arne L. Kalleberg
Social Capital, Networks, and Attainment
The Strength of Weak Ties
447(4)
Mark S. Granovetter
Social Networks and Status Attainment
451(3)
Nan Lin
Structural Holes
454(5)
Ronald S. Burt
Rational Action Approaches to Mobility and Attainment
Explaining Educational Differentials: Towards a Formal Rational Action Theory
459(12)
Richard Breen
John H. Goldthorpe
Rational Choice and the TSL Model of Occupational Opportunity
471(6)
John Allen Logan
Concluding Commentary to Part Four
Observations on the Study of Social Mobility and Inequality
477(14)
Robert D. Mare
Part V The Consequences of Stratification
Lifestyles and Consumption Patterns
The Theory of the Leisure Class
491(8)
Thorstein Veblen
Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste
499(27)
Pierre Bourdieu
Interests, Attitudes, and Personalities
The Realignment of U.S. Presidential Voting, 1952--1992
526(6)
Michael Hout
Jeff Manza
Clem Brooks
Job Complexity and Adult Personality
532(10)
Melvin L. Kohn
Concluding Commentary to Part Five
Social Stratification, Life-Style, Social Cognition, and Social Participation
542(13)
Paul Dimaggio
Part VI Ascriptive Processes
Racial and Ethnic Inequality Modes of Incorporation Classic Modes
A Theory of Ethnic Antagonism: The Split Labor Market
555(13)
Edna Bonacich
The Immigrant Enclave: Theory and Empirical Examples
568(12)
Alejandro Portes
Robert D. Manning
A Piece of the Pie: Blacks and White Immigrants Since 1880
580(12)
Stanley Lieberson
New Modes
Still the Promised City? African-Americans and New Immigrants in Postindustrial New York
592(5)
Roger Waldinger
The New Second Generation: Segmented Assimilation and Its Variants
597(11)
Alejandro Portes
Min Zhou
Black Identities: West Indian Immigrant Dreams and American Realities
608(3)
Mary C. Waters
Are Racial and Ethnic Distinctions Declining in Significance?
The Declining Significance of Race: Blacks and Changing American Institutions
611(12)
William Julius Wilson
The State of the American Dream: Race and Ethnic Socioeconomic Inequality in the United States, 1970--1990
623(13)
Charles Hirschman
C. Matthew Snipp
Black Wealth I White Wealth: A New Perspective on Racial Inequality
636(6)
Melvin L. Oliver
Thomas M. Shapiro
The Possibility of a New Racial Hierarchy in the Twenty-first-century United States
642(9)
Herbert J. Cans
The Underclass and the Ghetto
Jobless Poverty: A New Form of Social Dislocation in the Inner-City Ghetto
651(9)
William Julius Wilson
American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass
660(11)
Douglas S. Massey
Nancy A. Denton
Gender Stratification Gender and Class
The Dialectic of Sex
671(2)
Shulamith Firestone
The Unhappy Marriage of Marxism and Feminism: Towards a More Progressive Union
673(8)
Heidi Hartmann
The "Woman Problem" in Stratification Theory and Research
681(8)
Szonja Szelenyi
Sex Segregation The Structure Of Sex Segregation
Is There a Worldwide Sex Segregation Regime?
689(14)
David B. Grusky
Maria Charles
The Sources Of Sex Segregation
The Structure and Process of Sex Segregation
703(11)
William T. Bielby
Revolving Doors: Sex Segregation and Women's Careers
714(5)
Jerry A. Jacobs
Labor Markets as Queues: A Structural Approach to Changing Occupational Sex Composition
719(15)
Barbara F. Reskin
The Gender Gap in Wages
The Within-Job Gender Wage Gap
734(9)
Trond Petersen
Laurie A. Morgan
The Gender Gap in Earnings at Career Entry
743(18)
Margaret Mooney Marini
Pi-Ling Fan
Is There an Empirical Case for Comparable Worth?
Returns to Skill, Compensating Differentials, and Gender Bias: Effects of Occupational Characteristics on the Wages of White Women and Men
761(15)
Barbara Stanek Kilbourne
Paula England
George Farkas
Kurt Beron
Dorothea Weir
Why Do Female Occupations Pay Less?
776(5)
Tony Tam
Concluding Commentary to Part Six
Understanding Ascriptive Stratification: Some Issues and Principles
781(12)
Stanley Lieberson
Part VII The Future of Stratification
Theories of Industrialism and Modernity
Industrialism and Industrial Man
793(12)
Clark Kerr
John T. Dunlop
Frederick H. Harbison
Charles A. Myers
Theories of Post-Industrialism, Post-Socialism, and Post-Modernity Post-Industrialism and the New Class
The Coming of Post-Industrial Society
805(12)
Daniel Bell
The Future of Intellectuals and the Rise of the New Class
817(13)
Alvin W. Gouldner
Social Foundations of Postindustrial Economies
830(16)
Gøsta Esping-Andersen
Post-Socialism
Postsocialist Stratification
846(6)
Victor Nee
Making Capitalism without Capitalists
852(7)
Gil Eyal
Ivan Szelenyi
Eleanor Townsley
Post-Modernity
The Meaning of New Times
859(7)
Stuart Hall
The Death of Class
866(9)
Jan Pakulski Malcolm Waters
Trends in Income Inequality
Inequality in Earnings: Trends and Implications
875(6)
Martina Morris
Bruce Western
Concluding Commentary to Part Seven
The Evolution of Modern Stratification Systems
881(10)
John W. Meyer
Credits
891(6)
Supplementary Information on Sources and Excerpting
897(2)
Index 899(12)
About the Book and Editor 911
David B Grusky (Center on Poverty and Inequality, Stanford University