Emile Durkheim on the Family/ (Record no. 192832)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 00324nam a2200109Ia 4500
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 9781452233888
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Transcribing agency Department of Anthropology
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Mary Ann Lamanna
245 #0 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Emile Durkheim on the Family/
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc. New York:
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. SAGE,
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 2012.
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note Chapter 1: Introduction<br/>The Invisibility of Durkheim's Sociology of the Family<br/>Durkheim's Interest in the Family<br/>Durkheim's Life and Career<br/>Social Origins<br/>Education<br/>Academic Career<br/>Durkheim's “Beau Mariage”<br/>Sociology Established<br/>The Année School<br/>Intellectual Protagonists<br/>Father and Mentor: Death from a Broken Heart<br/>Conclusion: A Life Both Marginal and Mainstream<br/>The Times<br/>The Third Republic and Its Challengers<br/>Law Reform in France<br/>Durkheim on the Family<br/>Purpose and Organization of the Book<br/>New Durkheimian Themes<br/>Chapter 2: The Origins and Evolution of the Family<br/>Science and the Study of Society<br/>The Evolutionary Debates<br/>An Evolutionary Theory of the Family<br/>The Nature of the Family<br/>Stages of Evolution of the Family<br/>Prime Mover: The Engine of Family Change<br/>The End of Evolution?<br/>Commentary and Critique<br/>As Evolutionary Theories Go …<br/>Durkheim and Twentieth-Century Family Theory<br/>The Merits of the Master<br/>Conclusion<br/>Chapter 3: Studying the Family<br/>The Science of Sociology<br/>The Comparative Method<br/>Ethnography<br/>History<br/>Law<br/>The Family of the Civil Code<br/>Family Practices, Custom, and Law<br/>Moral Statistics<br/>Commentary and Critique<br/>Chapter 4: The Family System: Kin, Conjugal Family, and the State<br/>Elements of the Family System<br/>Mapping the System<br/>Gender<br/>The Changing Family System<br/>Kinship<br/>Zones of Kinship<br/>Family Communism<br/>Fictive Kinship<br/>The Politics of Kinship<br/>The State<br/>The Conjugal Family<br/>Husbands and Wives<br/>Parents and Children<br/>Siblings<br/>The Lens of Later Times<br/>Centrality of the Couple<br/>The Decline of Kinship<br/>The Family Economy in Law<br/>Property and Persons<br/>Family in Law and Family in Fact<br/>Theoretical Affinities<br/>Durkheim and Parsons<br/>Systems Theory<br/>Conclusion<br/>Chapter 5: The Interior of the Family<br/>Solidarity<br/>Domesticity<br/>Affectivity<br/>Gender<br/>The Familial Division of Labor<br/>Exchange Theory<br/>Conflict Theory<br/>Socialization<br/>Family, School, and State as Agents of Socialization<br/>Discipline and Autonomy<br/>Internalization<br/>Individuality<br/>Solidarity Again<br/>Subject to Debate<br/>Solidarity<br/>Exchange<br/>Socialization<br/>The Future of the Family<br/>Conclusion<br/>Chapter 6: Family Problems, Public Policy, and Social Justice<br/>Durkheim on Family Policy<br/>Sociologists in Action<br/>Viewpoints on Policy<br/>Turn-of-the-Twentieth-Century Family Problems<br/>Divorce<br/>Cohabitation and Nonmarital Births<br/>Free Union<br/>Fertility and Household Size<br/>Equality and Social Justice<br/>Family Policy and Social Values<br/>Science, Morality, and Policy<br/>Family Policy Issues Today<br/>Conclusion<br/>Chapter 7: Women and Sex: Challenges to the Family Order<br/>Introduction<br/>Feminism in France<br/>Durkheim's Venues<br/>Durkheim and Marianne Weber<br/>A Contradictory Theory of Gender<br/>The Facts, Just the Facts<br/>The Equality Principle and the Privileged Woman<br/>Family Unity and Female Autonomy<br/>Structural Differentiation<br/>Biological Difference or Social Construction?<br/>Cultural Leadership: Contradictions Resolved?<br/>This Will Pass<br/>In Sum: Solidarity, Equality, and the Division of Labor<br/>The Late-Twentieth-Century Debate about Durkheim<br/>Critical Perspectives<br/>Dimensions of Gender<br/>Was Durkheim Antifeminist?<br/>Durkheim's Gender Theory in Our Time<br/>Women's Equality<br/>Domesticity and Gender Roles<br/>Social Control of Men<br/>Men's Roles in the Family<br/>Sexuality and Sexual Relations<br/>Sex and Society<br/>Sex, Passion, and Marriage<br/>Sex and Creativity<br/>Sex, Science, and Morality<br/>Sex and Gender<br/>Sexual Orientation<br/>Conclusion<br/>Chapter 8: Conclusion<br/>Why Read Durkheim?<br/>Inattention to Durkheim's Sociology of the Family—Why?<br/>Historicism and Systematics<br/>Summary of Chapters<br/>Durkheim's Contributions<br/>A Sociology of the Family<br/>A Science of Society<br/>A Normative Model of the Family<br/>Evolutionary Theory and Social Change<br/>Structure-Functional Theory<br/>Exchange and Conflict Theories<br/>The Conjugal Family<br/>Family Law and Policy<br/>The Future of the Family<br/>What Durkheim Didn't Do<br/>Kinship Relations and Mutual Aid<br/>Mate Selection, Marital Adjustment, and the Family Life Cycle<br/>Socialization<br/>Social Psychology of Family Life<br/>Family and Economy<br/>Sociocultural Diversity in Family Life<br/>A Broader Look<br/>The Sociology of the Family and Durkheim's Other Work<br/>The Value of Durkheim's Sociology<br/>Strengths and Weaknesses<br/>Dilemmas of Existence<br/>Conclusion
856 ## - ONLINE RESOURCES
url http://sk.sagepub.com/books/emile-durkheim-on-the-family
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Koha item type e-Books
Holdings
Home library Current library Accession number Koha item type
Central Library, Sikkim University Central Library, Sikkim University E-205 e-Books
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