Social Psychology: Sociological PerspectivesMorris Rosenberg, Ralph H. Turner Transaction Publishers, 01/01/1990 - 776 من الصفحات "A valuable compendium: broad In scope, rich In detail: It should be a most useful reference for students and teachers." This is how Alex Inkeles of Stanford University described this text. It is made more so in this paperback edition aimed to reach a broad student population in sociology and psychology. The new Introduction written by Rosenberg and Turner brings the story of social psychology up to date by a rich and detailed examination of trends and tendencies of the 1980s. Although social psychology is a major area of specialization in sociology and psychology, this text Is the first comprehensive and authoritative work that looks at the subject from a sociological perspective. Edited by two of the foremost social psychologists in the United States, this book presents a synthesis of the major theoretical and empirical contributions of social psychology. They treat both traditional topics such as symbolic interaction, social exchange theory, small groups, social roles, and intergroup relations, and newer approaches such as socialization processes over the life cycle, sociology of the self, talk and social control, and the sociology of sentiments and emotions. The result is an absolutely Indispensable text for students and teachers who need a complete and ready reference to this burgeoning field. |
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النتائج 1-5 من 74
... reaction against once popular irrationality explanations . But more fundamentally it is a displacement of earlier attention to attitudes and values and a shift of focus from the ends to the means of human behavior and action . This ...
... react to the characteristics of the investigator , to be alert to the covert communications of the experimenter — in short , to make sense of , and respond to , their environments . The intended experi- mental stimulus is therefore but ...
... reactions of musicians to their audiences to their conceptions of themselves as musicians , bas- ing his argument on participant observation and informal interviewing . And Schwartz , Fearn , and Stryker ( 1966 ) investigate the way in ...
... react to them . While Mead shared this sense of the human being with multiple selves , his philo- sophic premises and hopes led to an emphasis on self as a global , un- differentiated unity . But such an approach to self does not square ...
... reactions and come to call up in the person the responses of others requires a procedure that captures the multiple dimensions of meaning composing the self . Burke conceptualizes the dimensions as a multidimensional semantic space ...
المحتوى
3 | |
30 | |
Reference Groups and Social Evaluations | 66 |
Social Roles | 94 |
Socialization Processes Over the Life Course | 133 |
Contexts of Socialization | 165 |
Talk and Social Control | 200 |
Attraction in Interpersonal Relationships | 235 |
Collective Behavior The Elementary Forms | 411 |
Collective Behavior Social Movements | 447 |
The Sociology of Deviance and Social Control | 483 |
Social Structure and Personality | 525 |
The Sociology of Sentiments and Emotion | 558 |
The SelfConcept Social Product and Social Force | 587 |
Group Movements Sociocultural Change and Personality | 614 |
Mass Communications and Public Opinion Strategies for Research | 639 |
Situated Activity and Identity Formation | 269 |
Expectation States and Interpersonal Behavior | 290 |
Small Groups | 320 |
Attitudes and Behavior | 347 |
Intergroup Relations | 378 |
References | 667 |
Name Index | 732 |
Subject Index | 742 |