David Riesman's Unpublished Writings and Continuing Legacy
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'David Riesman was American sociology's great public intellectual of the 20th century. Riesman theorized about society and social character, cared about undergraduate teaching and higher education and intervened in the world effectively on questions of the nuclear arms race and the Berlin crisis in the early 1960s. These unpublished Riesman manuscripts and original essays on his ideas and life are an indispensable resource for understanding the pre-history of public sociology.' - Neil McLaughlin, McMaster University, Canada
'David Riesman was a major public intellectual of the second half of the last century, his views regularly solicited by major media and institutions. This volume collects some of his unpublished papers - lectures, letters, speeches, uncompleted articles - on a range of subjects, which illustrate his amazing fertility of mind, his talent as a writer and phrase-maker, and his unique ability to discern, from simple engagement with individuals and aspects of popular culture, significant trends in American society that now give him the aura of a prophet.' - Nathan Glazer, Harvard University, USA
'David Riesman will forever be remembered as the principal author of The Lonely Crowd, one of the most influential works of sociology ever written. But he deserves to be known for much more than that. As this valuable collection shows, he was a penetrating analyst of all facets of human culture, equipped with a supple, capacious, and curious mind, seemingly incapable of writing or speaking an uninteresting word. One can hear his humane voice and feel his generous and liberal spirit in these pages.' - Wilfred M. McClay, University of Oklahoma, USA
'This collection of texts will undoubtedly help rekindle interest in Riesman’s work.' - Contemporary Sociology
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It has been over 60 years since David Riesman’s most famous work The Lonely Crowd brought him international acclaim. While this remains a best-selling sociology book, Riesman’s expertise and publications spanned far beyond the treatment of the American social character type offered there. Les mer
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Detaljer
- Forlag
- Routledge
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- 314
- ISBN
- 9781032098371
- Utgivelsesår
- 2021
- Format
- 23 x 16 cm
Anmeldelser
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'David Riesman was American sociology's great public intellectual of the 20th century. Riesman theorized about society and social character, cared about undergraduate teaching and higher education and intervened in the world effectively on questions of the nuclear arms race and the Berlin crisis in the early 1960s. These unpublished Riesman manuscripts and original essays on his ideas and life are an indispensable resource for understanding the pre-history of public sociology.' - Neil McLaughlin, McMaster University, Canada
'David Riesman was a major public intellectual of the second half of the last century, his views regularly solicited by major media and institutions. This volume collects some of his unpublished papers - lectures, letters, speeches, uncompleted articles - on a range of subjects, which illustrate his amazing fertility of mind, his talent as a writer and phrase-maker, and his unique ability to discern, from simple engagement with individuals and aspects of popular culture, significant trends in American society that now give him the aura of a prophet.' - Nathan Glazer, Harvard University, USA
'David Riesman will forever be remembered as the principal author of The Lonely Crowd, one of the most influential works of sociology ever written. But he deserves to be known for much more than that. As this valuable collection shows, he was a penetrating analyst of all facets of human culture, equipped with a supple, capacious, and curious mind, seemingly incapable of writing or speaking an uninteresting word. One can hear his humane voice and feel his generous and liberal spirit in these pages.' - Wilfred M. McClay, University of Oklahoma, USA
'This collection of texts will undoubtedly help rekindle interest in Riesman’s work.' - Contemporary Sociology
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