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Sociology


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Sociology After the Crisis is an eloquent and prophetic call ...

(Avery Gordon, University of California, )

Charles Lemert writes practical sociology for all time, a provocatively ...

(Joe R. Feagin, University of Florida)

Sociology After the Crisis

Product Description

Widely assigned and taught in senior capstone and social theory courses, Sociology After the Crisis offers the first systematic theory of social differences built on the sociological traditions by embracing to Durkheim, Weber and other familiar figures. The first edition was acclaimed for its nuanced and original rereading of Durkheim in relation to the theoretical reasons he and his contemporaries neglected race and gender.

This new edition features two chapters of new material written in the summer of 2003, as the new social structures of the 21st century became increasingly clear. The new Chapter Ten draws upon 9-11, the "new world order" of two Bush presidencies, and globalization to show how individuals' lives and sociologies must be thought about in new ways. These events also highlight how American society and sociology have responded and sometimes failed in the struggle over the crisis of modernism.

Reviews for the First Edition:

"[This] expansive reimagining of the historical roots of sociological imagination - especially as it embraces voices and visions long lost to our most important national debates - is balm to the fractured soul of American society. Lemert's elegant and passionate volume will aid immeasurably in our nation's search for sane solutions to the crises of purpose and perspective he so skillfully explores."
Michael Eric Dyson, author of Making Malcolm and Between God and Gangsta' Rap

"Elegantly crafted."
Steven Seidman, State University of New York at Albany

About The Author

Charles Lemert is Andrus Professor of Sociology at Wesleyan University, Connecticut. He is the author of Durkeim's Ghosts (2006).

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