Oxford Readers Class
Oxford Readers Class
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Abstract
In recent years, the concept of class has come under increasing scrutiny, as a means of explaining both the present and the past. The post-industrial class has superceded the manual working class, and new forms of industrial management have broken up more traditional hierarchies and outlooks. Furthermore, feminism has now brought into question the whole concept of a class identity. Can class viably explain the present? Did it ever provide an adequate explanation of the past? How did concepts of class develop? What is the language of class? A variety of writings are drawn upon here to suggest answers to these questions, to provide a balanced survey of thought on class, from Marx and Weber to the present day, and to look beyond this towards the very future of class.
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Front Matter
- Introduction
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Part A The Classical Inheritance and its Development
Patrick Joyce (ed.) -
Part B An Inheritance in Question
Patrick Joyce (ed.)- Introduction
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7
Positions Sociology and Postmodermity
Zygmunt Bauman
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8
Sociology and the Study of Society
Alain Touraine
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8
Sociology and the Study of Society
Alain Touraine
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9
Arguments The End of the Social
Jean Baudrillard
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10
Fractured Identities
Donna Haraway
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11
The Reality of Representation and the Representation of Reality
Pierre Bourdieu
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12
Bourdleu on ‘Habitus’
John B Thompson
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13
Giddens on ‘Structuration’
John B Thompson
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14
The Concept of Structure
Pierre Bourdieu
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15
The Incarnation of Social Structure
Wes Sharrock andRod Watson
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16
Castoriadis on the Imaginary Institution of Society
John B Thompson
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17
The Social Imaginary
Cornelius Castoriadis
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Part C Class and the Historians
Patrick Joyce (ed.)- 17 Cornelius castoriadis, The Social Imaginary
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18
Culture and Structure: Social History Orthodoxy: The Making of Class
E P Thompson
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19
Class and Class Struggle
E P Thompsoni
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20
Levels of Class Formation
Levels of Class Formation
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21
The ‘Linguistic Turn’: Class, ‘Experience’, and Politics
Gareth Stedman Jones
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22
Language, Gender, and Working-Class History
Joan W Scott
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23
A People and a Class
Patrick Joyce
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24
Ranclere and the Worker
Donald Reid
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25
The Nights of Labor
Jacques Ranciere
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26
A Post-Materialist Rhetoric for Labour History
William jun H Sewell
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Part D The History of the Social
Patrick Joyce (ed.)- Introduction
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27
Habermas and the ‘Public Sphere’
Geoff Eleyi
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28
‘Society’ and the ‘Public Sphere’ in Eighteenth-and Nineteenth-Century Germany’
James Van Horn Melton
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29
Govemmentality
Michel Foucault
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30
The Emergence of Liberal Governmentallty, I
Colin Gordon
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31
The Emergence of Uberal Govemrnentallty, II
Graham Burchell
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32
The Mobilization of Society
Jacques Donzelot
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33
Towards a Critical Sociology of Freedom
Nikolas Rose
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34
Gendering ‘the Social’
Denise Riley
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Part E The Hermeneutics of the Social: Codes and Categories
Patrick Joyce (ed.) -
Part F The Language of Class
Patrick Joyce (ed.)- Introduction
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40
The Language of Orders in Early Modem Europe
Peter Burke
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41
The Failure of the Bourgeoisie
Martin J Wiener
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42
Gender and the Middle Class
Leonore Davidoff andCatherine Hall
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43
The Making of the British Middle Ciass: An Elite-Led Class
R J Morris
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44
Narratives of Class
Patrick Joyce
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45
Meanings of Class
William jun H Sewell
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46
War and the Language of Class
Bernard Waites
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47
The State and the Language of Class
Ross Mckibbin
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