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Bibliography of sociology

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Thisbibliography of sociology is a list of works, organized by subdiscipline, on the subject ofsociology. Some of the works are selected from general anthologies of sociology,[1][2][3][4][5] while other works are selected because they are notable enough to be mentioned in a general history of sociology or one of its subdisciplines.[i]

Sociology studiessociety using various methods of empirical investigation to understand humansocial activity, from themicro level of individualagency and interaction to themacro level of systems andsocial structure.[6][7][8]

Foundations

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See also:History of sociology andMax Weber bibliography

Durkheim

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Main article:Émile Durkheim

Culture

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Main article:Sociology of cultureSee also:Cultural criminology,Sociology of the internet, andPhenomenology

Economy

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Cover of the French edition of theDivision of Labor in Society byEmile Durkheim
Main article:Economic sociologySee also:Marxist bibliography

Economic sociology attempts to explaineconomic phenomena. While overlapping with the general study ofeconomics at times, economic sociology chiefly concentrates on the roles of social relations and institutions.[25]

Industry

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Industrial sociology is the sociology oftechnological change,globalization, labor markets, work organization,managerial practices andemployment relations.[35][36]

Spatial sociology

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Main articles:Sociology of space andSocial geography

Environment

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Environmental sociology studies the relationship between society and environment, particularly the social factors that cause environmental problems, the societal impacts of those problems, and efforts to solve the problems.

  • Carson, Rachel. 1962.Silent Spring.[40]
  • Diamond, Jared. 2006.Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed.[41]
  • Hannigan, John A. 1995.Environmental Sociology: A Social Constructionist Perspective.[42]
    • Argues that a society's willingness to recognize and solve environmental problems depends more upon the way these claims are presented by a limited number of interest groups than upon the severity of the threat they pose.[citation needed]
  • Michelson, William. 2002.Handbook of Environmental Sociology.[43]
    • Provides an overview of the field of environmental sociology and its various research emphases.[citation needed]
  • Schnaiberg, Allan, and Kenneth Alan Gould. 2000.Environment and Society: The Enduring Conflict. Caldwell.[44]
    • Demonstrates how our global economy requires increasing levels of economic expansion, which in turn requires increasing withdrawals for the natural environment.[citation needed]

Demography

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Demography is thestatistical study ofhumanpopulation. It encompasses the study of the size, structure and distribution of these populations, and spatial and/or temporal changes in them in response tobirth,migration,aging anddeath.

Urban

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Urban sociology refers the study of social life and human interaction inmetropolitan areas.

Gender and Intersectionality

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Main articles:Sociology of gender andIntersectionality

Knowledge

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Main articles:Sociology of knowledge andSociology of scientific knowledge

Sociology of knowledge refers to the study of the relationship between human thought and the social context within which it arises, as well as of the effects prevailing ideas have on societies.

Politics

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Main article:Political sociologySee also:Comparative sociology,Military sociology, andPolicy sociology

Traditionally, political sociology has been concerned with the ways in which social trends, dynamics, and structures of domination affect formal political processes, as well as exploring how various social forces work together to change political policies.[67] Now, it is also concerned with the formation of identity through social interaction, the politics of knowledge, and other aspects of social relations.

Race and ethnicity

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Main article:Sociology of race and ethnic relationsSee also:Sociology of immigration

The sociology of race and ethnic relations refers to the study ofsocial,political, andeconomic relations betweenraces andethnicities at all levels of society, encompassing subjects such asracism andresidential segregation.

Religion

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Main article:Sociology of religion

The sociology of religion concerns the role ofreligion insociety, including practices, historical backgrounds, developments, and universal themes.[75] There is particular emphasis on the recurring role of religion in all societies and throughout recorded history.

Theory

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Main article:Sociological theory

Sociological theories are complextheoretical andmethodological frameworks used to analyze and explain objects of social study, which ultimately facilitate the organization of sociological knowledge.[78]

Conflict Theory

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Conflict theories, originally influenced byMarxist thought, are perspectives that see societies as defined through conflicts that are produced by inequality.[79]: 34–6  Conflict theory emphasizessocial conflict, as well aseconomic inequality,social inequality,oppression, andcrime.

Rational Choice Theory

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Rational choice theory models social behavior as the interaction of utility-maximizing individuals.

Social Exchange Theory

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Social Exchange Theory models social interaction as a series of exchanges between actors who give one another rewards and penalties, which impacts and guides future behavior.George Homans' version of exchange theory specifically argues thatbehaviorist stimulus-response principles can explain the emergence of complex social structures.

  • Blau, Peter. 1964.Exchange & Power in Social Life.
  • Emerson, Richard. 1962. "Power-Dependence Theory."American Sociological Review 27(1):31-41.
  • Homans, George C. 1958. "Social Behavior as Exchange."American Journal of Sociology 63(6):597-606.
  • Homans, George C. 1961.Social Behavior: Its Elementary Forms.

Social Network Analysis

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Making use ofnetwork theory,social network analysis is structural approach to sociology that views norms and behaviors as embedded in chains of social relations.

  • Scott, John. 1991.Social Network Analysis: A Handbook.[87]
    • Provides a broad introduction to the subject.
  • Wasserman, Stanley, and Katherine Faust. 1994.Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications.[88]
    • Presents thorough methodological coverage of the approach.
  • Wellman, Barry, and S.D. Berkowitz, eds. 1988.Social Structures: A Network Approach.[89]
    • Provides a readable theoretical overview of the subject using many case studies.

Sociocybernetics

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See also:Sociology and Sociocybernetics

Sociocybernetics is the application ofsystems theory andcybernetics to sociology.

Structural Functionalism

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Structural functionalism is a broad perspective that interprets society as astructure with interrelated parts.

Symbolic Interactionism

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Symbolic interactionism argues that human behavior is guided by the meanings people construct together in social interaction.

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^See Michie, Jonathan, ed. 2001.Reader's Guide to the Social Sciences.

Citations

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  1. ^Collins 1994.
  2. ^Appelrouth & Edles 2007.
  3. ^Edles & Appelrouth 2010.
  4. ^abcdefghFarganis 2011.
  5. ^abcdeGiddens 2010.
  6. ^Scott, John, and Gordon Marshall, eds. 2005. "Comte, Auguste."A Dictionary of Sociology (3rd ed.). Oxford:Oxford University Press.ISBN 978-0-19-860986-5.
  7. ^Ashley, David, and David M. Orenstein. 2005.Sociological theory: Classical Statements (6th ed.). Boston:Pearson Education.ISBN 978-0-205-38130-2. pp. 3–5, 32–40.
  8. ^Giddens, Anthony,Mitchell Duneier, and Richard Applebaum. 2011. "Chapter 1."Introduction to Sociology (8th ed.). New York:W. W. Norton & Company.ISBN 978-0-393-91213-5.
  9. ^Bridges, J. H., transl. 2009.A General View of Positivism (reprint ed.), by Auguste Comte. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.ISBN 978-1-108-00064-2.
  10. ^Marx, Karl. 2007 [1867].Das Kapital.Gardners Books.ISBN 978-1-934568-43-9.
  11. ^Marx, Karl, and Engels, Friedrich. 1998 [1867].The German Ideology, including theses onFeuerbach and an introduction to the critique of political economy,Great Books in Philosophy.Prometheus Books.ISBN 978-1-57392-258-6.
  12. ^Appelrouth & Edles 2007, pp. 31–33.
  13. ^Baehr, Peter, and Gordon C. Wells, trans. 2002.The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, by Max Weber.Penguin Books.ISBN 978-0-14-043921-2.
  14. ^Appelrouth & Edles 2007, pp. 167–169.
  15. ^Du Bois, W. E. B. 2010 [1899].The Philadelphia Negro: A Social Study. Philadelphia:University of Pennsylvania.ISBN 978-1-163-25083-9. [see p. 520.]
  16. ^abAppelrouth & Edles 2007, pp. 338–339
  17. ^abDurkheim, Emile. 1997 [1893].The Division of Labour in Society (1stpb ed.). New York: Free Press.ISBN 978-0-684-83638-6.
  18. ^abcdefAppelrouth & Edles 2007, pp. 103–105
  19. ^abDurkheim, Emile. 1997 [1897].Suicide: A Study in Sociology. New York:Free Press.ISBN 0-684-83632-7.
  20. ^Gianfranco Poggi (2000).Durkheim. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Chapter 1.
  21. ^abCladis, Mark S., ed. 2008.The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life (reissue ed.), by Emile Durkheim, translated by C. Cosman. Oxford:Oxford University Press.ISBN 978-0-19-954012-9.
  22. ^Halls, W. D., trans.The Rules of Sociological Method (1st American ed.), by Emile Durkheim, with introduction bySteven Lukes. New York:Free Press.ISBN 978-0-02-907940-9.
  23. ^Bourdieu, Pierre, andJean-Claude Passeron. 1990 [1970].Reproduction in Education, Society and Culture, translated by R. Nice, (Theory, Culture and Society Series). London:SAGE.
  24. ^Katz, Jack. 1988.Seductions of Crime: Moral and Sensual Attractions in Doing Evil. Basic Books.ISBN 9780465076154.
  25. ^Swedberg, Richard (2003).Principles of economic sociology. Princeton: Princeton University Press.ISBN 978-0-691-07439-9.
  26. ^Boltanski, Luc, and Ève Chiapello. 2005.The New Spirit of Capitalism. London:Verso Books.
  27. ^Boltanski, Luc, andLaurent Thévenot. 2006.On Justification. The Economies of Worth. Princeton University Press.
  28. ^Zunz, Olivier, ed. 2004.Democracy in America, by Alexis de Tocqueville, translated byA. Goldhammer. New York:The Library of America.ISBN 1-931082-54-5.
  29. ^Gilbert, Stuart, trans. 1955.The Old Regime and the French Revolution, byAlexis de Tocqueville. New York:Anchor Books.
  30. ^Granovetter, Mark. 1985. "Economic Action and Social Structure: The Problem of Embeddedness."The American Journal of Sociology 91(3):481–510.doi:10.1086/228311.
  31. ^Polanyi, Karl. 1944.The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time.Beacon Press.ISBN 978-0-8070-5643-1.
  32. ^Frisby, David, ed. 2004 [1978].The Philosophy of Money (3rd enlarged ed.), byGeorg Simmel, translated by D. Frisby and T. Bottomore. London: Routledge.ISBN 0-203-68069-3 (eReader).ISBN 0-203-48113-5 (master eBook).
  33. ^Weber, Max. 1978 [1922].Economy and Society. Berkeley:University of California Press.
  34. ^White, Harrison C. 2002.Markets from Networks: Socioeconomic Models of Production. Princeton:Princeton University Press.
  35. ^Watson, Tony J. (2008).Sociology, work and industry (5th ed.). London: Routledge. p. 392.ISBN 978-0-415-43555-0.
  36. ^Donald Emery Wray (1953).Industrial sociology: an annotated bibliography. Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, University of Illinois.ASIN B003NXV2LW.
  37. ^Braverman, Harry. 1974.Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century. New York City:Monthly Review Press.
  38. ^Burawoy, Michael. 1979.Manufacturing Consent: Changes in the Labor Process Under Monopoly Capitalism. Chicago:University of Chicago Press.
  39. ^Goldthorpe, John,David Lockwood, Frank Bechhofer, andJennifer Platt. 1968.The Affluent Worker: Industrial Attitudes and Behaviour. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.
  40. ^Carson, Rachel. 2002 [1962].Silent Spring.Mariner Books.ISBN 0-618-24906-0.
  41. ^Diamond, Jared. 2006.Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. New York:Penguin Books.ISBN 0-14-303655-6.
  42. ^Hannigan, John A. 1995.Environmental Sociology: A Social Constructionist Perspective (reprint ed.). London:Routledge.ISBN 978-0-415-11255-0.
  43. ^Michelson, William. 2002.Handbook of Environmental Sociology (1st pub. ed.), edited by R. E. Dunlap. Westport:Greenwood Press.ISBN 978-0-313-26808-3.
  44. ^Schnaiberg, Allan, and Kenneth Alan Gould. 2000.Environment and Society: The Enduring Conflict. Caldwell, NJ: Blackburn.ISBN 1-930665-00-8.
  45. ^Malthus, Thomas. 1830 [1798].An Essay on the Principle of Population (1st ed.), includingA Summary View and introduction byAntony Flew.Penguin Classics.ISBN 0-14-043206-X.
  46. ^Castells, Manuel. 1977 [1972].The Urban Question: A Marxist Approach. Cambridge, MA:MIT Press.ISBN 978-0-262-03063-2.
  47. ^Delany, Samuel R. 1999.Times Square Red, Times Square Blue. New York:New York University Press.ISBN 0-8147-1919-8.
  48. ^Gottdiener, Mark, and Ray Hutchison. 2000.The New Urban Sociology (2nd ed.). Boston:McGraw-Hill.ISBN 978-0-07-289180-5.
  49. ^Hutter, Mark. 2007.Experiencing Cities: A Global Approach. Boston:Allyn & Bacon.ISBN 978-0-205-27451-2.
  50. ^Jacobs, Jane. 1993 [1961].The Death and Life of Great American Cities, with a foreword by the author. New York:Modern Library.ISBN 0-679-60047-7.
  51. ^Robert Fulford (February 16, 1992)."When Jane Jacobs Took on the World".The New York Times. Retrieved16 August 2017.
  52. ^Molotch, Harvey, andJohn R. Logan. 2007 [1987].Urban Fortunes: The Political economy of Place (20thanniv. ed.). Berkeley, CA:University of California Press.ISBN 978-0-520-06341-9.
  53. ^Park, Robert E., andErnest W. Burgess. 1984. [1925].The City. 1967. (reprint ed.), with introduction byM. Janowitz andR. D. McKenzie. Chicago:University of Chicago Press.ISBN 978-0-226-64611-4.
  54. ^Bem, Sandra Lipsitz. 1994.Lenses of Gender: Transforming the Debate on Sexual Inequality. New Haven:Yale University Press.
  55. ^Chodorow, Nancy. 1999 [1978].The Reproduction of Mothering. Berkeley:University of California Press.
  56. ^Edles & Appelrouth 2010, pp. 361–369.
  57. ^abEdles & Appelrouth 2010, pp. 341–342
  58. ^Connell, Raewyn W. 1987.Gender and Power: Society, the Person, and Sexual Politics. Redwood City, CA:Stanford University Press.
  59. ^Connell, Raewyn W. 2002.Gender: Short Introductions. Hoboken, NJ:Wiley-Blackwell.
  60. ^Berger, Peter L., and Thomas Luckmann. 1991 [1966].The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge (reprint ed.). London:Penguin Books.ISBN 978-0-14-013548-0.
  61. ^Edles & Appelrouth 2010, pp. 276–277.
  62. ^Bloor, David. 1991 [1976].Knowledge and social imagery (2nd ed.). Chicago:University of Chicago Press.ISBN 978-0-226-06097-2.
  63. ^Fuller, Steve (1993). "Critical notice: David Bloor'sKnowledge and Social Imagery".Philosophy of Science.60 (1) (Second ed.):158–170.doi:10.1086/289724.
  64. ^Trenn, Thaddeus J., andRobert K. Merton, eds. 1981.Genesis and development of a scientific fact (Phoenix ed.), byLudwik Fleck, translated by F. Bradley and T. J. Trenn, foreword by Thomas S. . Chicago:University of Chicago Press.ISBN 978-0-226-25325-1.
  65. ^Latour, Bruno, andSteve Woolgar. 1979.Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts. Beverly Hills:SAGE Publications.ISBN 0-8039-0993-4.
  66. ^Shils, Edward, and Louis Wirth, trans. 1985.Mannheim, Karl (1966).Ideology and Utopia: An introduction to the sociology of knowledge (facsimile ed.).ISBN 9780156439558. by Karl Mannheim. New York:Harvest Books.ISBN 978-0-15-643955-8.OCLC 1035595473.
  67. ^Nachtigal M. Paul."Political Trends Affecting Nonmetropolitan America." Journal of Research in Rural Education Vol.10(1994):161-166.Print. From:http://www.jrre.psu.edu/articles/v10,n3,p161-166,Nachtigal.pdfArchived 2013-10-30 at theWayback Machine
  68. ^abMills, C. Wright. 2000 [1958].The Power Elite, edited byAlan Wolfe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.ISBN 978-0-19-513354-7.
  69. ^abcdEdles & Appelrouth 2010, pp. 84–85
  70. ^Domhoff, G. William. 1967.Who Rules America?. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:Prentice-Hall— 2006 [1967].Who Rules America?: Power and Politics, and Social Change (5th ed.). Boston: McGraw-Hill.ISBN 978-0-07-287625-3.
  71. ^Skocpol, Theda. 1979.States and Social Revolutions: A Comparative Analysis of France, Russia, and China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.ISBN 978-0-521-29499-7.
  72. ^Piven, Frances Fox, andRichard Cloward. 1988.Why Americans Don't Vote.Pantheon Books.
  73. ^Piven, Frances Fox, andRichard Cloward. 2000.Why Americans Still Don't Vote: And Why Politicians Want It That Way. Boston:Beacon Press.ISBN 978-0-8070-0449-4.
  74. ^Du Bois, W. E. B. 1996 [1903].The Souls of Black Folk (Penguin Classics reprint ed.), with introduction by D. B. Gibson. New York:Penguin Books.ISBN 0-14-018998-X.
  75. ^Kevin J. Christiano, et al., (2nd ed., 2008), Sociology of Religion: Contemporary Developments, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.ISBN 978-0-7425-6111-3
  76. ^Berger, Peter L. 2011 [1967].The Sacred Canopy: Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion.Open Road Media.ISBN 978-1-4532-1537-1.
  77. ^Berger, Peter L. 2011 [1970].A Rumor of Angels: Modern Society and the Rediscovery of the Supernatural.Open Road Media.ISBN 978-1-4532-1543-2.
  78. ^Calhoun, Craig J. (2002).Classical sociological theory. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 1–.ISBN 978-0-631-21348-2. Retrieved2 March 2011.
  79. ^Sears, Alan. 2008.A Good Book, In Theory: A Guide to Theoretical Thinking. North York, ON: Higher EducationUniversity of Toronto Press.ISBN 1-55111-536-0.
  80. ^Veblen, Thorstein. 1994 [1899].The Theory of the Leisure Class, with introduction byRobert Lekachman.Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics. New York:Penguin Books.ISBN 978-0-14-018795-3.OCLC 31212002.
  81. ^abAppelrouth & Edles 2007, p. 24
  82. ^Veblen, Thorstein. 1978 [1904].The Theory of Business Enterprise. New Brunswick, NJ:Transaction Books.ISBN 0-87855-699-0.
  83. ^Mills, C. Wright. 2002 [1951].White Collar: The American Middle Classes (50thanniv. ed.). New York:Oxford University Press.ISBN 978-0-19-515708-6.
  84. ^Mills, C. Wright. 2000 [1959].Wright Mills, C. (2000).The Sociological Imagination (40thanniv. ed.).ISBN 978-0-19-513373-8. with afterword byT. Gitlin. Oxford:Oxford University Press.ISBN 978-0-19-513373-8.
  85. ^Sharp, Gene. 1985.Making Europe Unconquerable (1st ed.). Cambridge, MA:Harper & Row.ISBN 978-0-85066-329-7.
  86. ^Olson, Mancur. 1971.The Logic of Collective Action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups. Boston, MA:Harvard University Press.ISBN 0-674-53751-3.
  87. ^Scott, John. 2000 [1991].Social Network Analysis: A Handbook (2nd ed.). London: SAGE.ISBN 978-0-7619-6339-4.
  88. ^Wasserman, Stanley, and Katherine Faust. 1999 [1994].Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications (reprint. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.ISBN 978-0-521-38707-1.
  89. ^Wellman, Barry, and S. D. Berkowitz, eds. (1991) [1988].Social Structures: A Network Approach (reprint ed.). Greenwich: Jai Press.ISBN 978-0-7623-0290-1.
  90. ^Bánáthy, Béla H. 1996.Designing Social Systems in a Changing World. New York:Plenum Press.ISBN 0-306-45251-0.
  91. ^Bateson, Gregory. 2000 [1972].Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Collected Essays in Anthropology, Psychiatry, Evolution, and Epistemology. Chicago:University of Chicago Press.ISBN 0-226-03905-6.
  92. ^Bateson, Gregory. 1979.Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity, (Advances in Systems Theory, Complexity, and the Human Sciences).Hampton Press.ISBN 1-57273-434-5.
  93. ^Bateson, Gregory, and M. C. Bateson. 1988.Bateson, Gregory; Bateson, Mary Catherine (1988).Angels Fear: Towards an Epistemology of the Sacred.ISBN 9780553345810. Chicago:University of Chicago Press.ISBN 978-0-553-34581-0.
  94. ^László, Ervin. 1984.The systems view of the world: The natural philosophy of the new developments in the sciences. New York:George Braziller.ISBN 0-8076-0636-7.
  95. ^von Bertalanffy, Ludwig. 1971 [1968].General system theory: foundations, development, applications (rev. ed.). New York:George Braziller.ISBN 0-8076-0453-4.
  96. ^Wiener, Norbert (1961) [1948].Cybernetics or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine (2nd revised ed.). Cambridge, MA:MIT Press.ISBN 978-0-262-73009-9.
  97. ^Parsons, Talcott. 1968. [1937].The Structure of Social Action: A Study in Social Theory with Special Reference to a Group of Recent European Writers (Pbk. ed.). New York:Free Press.ISBN 978-0-02-924240-7.
  98. ^abcEdles & Appelrouth 2010, pp. 24–25
  99. ^Parsons, Talcott. 1970 [1951].The Social System (reprint ed.). London:Routledge & Kegan Paul.ISBN 978-0-7100-6902-3.
  100. ^Parsons, Talcott, andEdward A. Shils. 2001 [1951].Toward a General Theory of Action: Theoretical Foundations for the Social Sciences (abridged ed.), with introduction byN. J. Smelser. New Brunswick, NJ:Transaction Publishers.ISBN 978-0-7658-0718-2.

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