Listing 1 - 8 of 8 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
Ce texte de présentation se penche sur la place que les femmes occupent dans la sociologie en tant que profession et en tant que discipline du savoir. L'auteur montre comment la perspective féministe, en pénétrant dans la sociologie, y a ouvert diverses voies de recherche : les études sur les femmes, la critique épistémologique, théorique et méthodologique et, enfin, ce qu'on a appelé la nouvelle sociologie des femmes: point de vue des dominées sur la réalité sociale. En conclusion, l'auteur invite les sociologues à entreprendre, entre autres tâches, l'étude des nouvelles formes d'oppression des femmes que les résistances sociales au processus de la libération ont générées.
Choose an application
Sociologists --- Sociologists --- Women sociologists --- Women sociologists --- Sociology --- History --- Schnapper, Dominique
Choose an application
Sociology --- Women sociologists --- Sociologie --- Femmes sociologues --- History. --- Philosophy. --- Histoire --- Philosophie
Choose an application
Sociology --- Women sociologists --- Sociologie --- Femmes sociologues --- Bio-bibliography --- Biography --- Biobibliographie --- Biographies --- -Women sociologists --- -316 <01> --- 316 <092> --- Sociologists --- Women social scientists --- Social theory --- Social sciences --- Sociologie --(algemeen)--Bibliografieën. Catalogi --- Sociologie --(algemeen)--Biografieën --- 316 <092> Sociologie --(algemeen)--Biografieën --- 316 <01> Sociologie --(algemeen)--Bibliografieën. Catalogi --- 316 <01>
Choose an application
Du genre autobiographique, on connaissait les récits sans enquête et les ego-histoires de " grands hommes " ; dans les sciences sociales, les enquêtes sur des proches tenus à distance par l'effacement de soi. Renouant avec l'ambition d'une sociologie sensible et réflexive, Rose-Marie Lagrave propose un nouveau type de socioanalyse : l'enquête autobiographique.Ressaisissant son parcours en sociologue et en féministe, elle remet en cause les récits dominants sur la méritocratie, les stéréotypes associés aux transfuges de classe, le mythe d'un " ascenseur social " décollant par la grâce de talents ou de dons exceptionnels. Cet ouvrage retrace une migration sociale faite de multiples aléas et bifurcations, où domination de classe et domination de genre s'entremêlent : le parcours d'une fille de famille nombreuse, enracinée en milieu rural, que rien ne prédestinait à s'asseoir sur les bancs de la Sorbonne puis à devenir directrice d'études à l'EHESS, où elle croise notamment les chemins de Michelle Perrot, Françoise Héritier, Pierre Bourdieu et Jean-Claude Passeron.Mobilisant un vaste corpus théorique et littéraire, Rose-Marie Lagrave ouvre sa malle à archives et la boîte à souvenirs. De ses expériences de boursière à ses engagements au MLF et sa pratique du métier de sociologue, elle exhume et interroge les traces des rencontres qui l'ont construite. Parvenue à l'heure des bilans, cette passeuse de frontières et de savoirs questionne avec la même ténacité la vieillesse et la mort.Contre les injonctions de " réussir " et de " rester soi ", ce livre invite à imaginer de nouvelles formes d'émancipation par la socioanalyse : se ressaisir, c'est acquérir un pouvoir d'agir, commun aux transfuges de classe et aux féministes, permettant de critiquer les hiérarchies sociales et de les transgresser.
Sociologues --- Féministes --- Féministes --- Women sociologists --- Sociologists --- Sociology --- Lagrave, Rose-Marie --- Social mobility --- Women --- History. --- Social conditions. --- Lagrave, Rose Marie --- Family. --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Women sociologists - France --- Sociologists - France --- Sociology - France --- Social mobility - France - History. --- Women - France - Social conditions. --- Feminism --- Autobiography --- Book --- Féminisme --- Sociologie
Choose an application
"Book: An American Daughter’s Story is a collection of linked stories written chronologically from 1980–2015. They create a multifaceted narrative of how the public and the private, the past and present, the local and global, intersect. With earnest reflection, modesty and humor, Laurel Richardson introduces the reader to her Ohio neighborhoods, friends, family, writers and therapy dogs. She ages, retires and frets over her droopy eyebrow. Her town’s local stores close; police bust heroin dealers; September 11th happens; universities corporatize; poetry venues transform. All this and much more as Richardson honors the complexity and vibrancy of America, and her life within it. Richardson’s renowned book, Fields of Play (1997) is about constructing a life inside the academy; Seven Minutes from Home is about constructing a life outside the academy. This extraordinary example of literary sociology can be read for pleasure, adopted in book clubs, or used in courses in American Studies, communication, creative writing, narrative, qualitative research, sociology, cultural studies and women’s studies. An appendix offers discussion questions, research projects and creative writing exercises. “A tour de force, the penultimate statement from gifted writer Laurel Richardson. Here an American daughter’s story comes home.” – Norman Denzin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign “The stories are riveting; you will not be able to stop reading.” – Carolyn Ellis, University of South Florida “An exemplar for how good social science should be written.” – Jessica Smartt Gullion, Texas Woman’s University “A love letter to a culture and a life well-lived.” – Anne Harris, Monash University “Highly recommended for courses in sociology, women’s studies and creative writing.” – Mary Margaret Fonow, Arizona State University Laurel Richardson, Professor Emeritus at The Ohio State University, has received a Life-Time Achievement Award in Qualitative Research, a Cooley Book Award, and two Affirmative-Action awards. She writes daily. She is most proud of her therapy dogs’ work with special-needs children. ".
Education. --- Education, general. --- Women sociologists --- Literature and society --- Authorship. --- Middle West --- Social conditions. --- Literature --- Literature and sociology --- Society and literature --- Sociology and literature --- Social aspects --- American Midwest --- Central States --- Central States Region --- Midwest --- Midwest States --- Midwestern States --- North Central Region --- North Central States --- Mississippi River Valley --- Northwest, Old --- Sociolinguistics --- Sociologists --- Women social scientists --- Children --- Education, Primitive --- Education of children --- Human resource development --- Instruction --- Pedagogy --- Schooling --- Students --- Youth --- Civilization --- Learning and scholarship --- Mental discipline --- Schools --- Teaching --- Training --- Education --- Biography.
Choose an application
Contains autobiographies by Dennis Wrong, David Riesman, James S. Coleman, Joseph Gusfield, Andrew M. Greeley, Bennett M. Berger, Dean MacCa.
Sociologists --- Sociology --- Sociologues --- Sociologie --- Biography --- Biographical methods --- History --- Biographie --- Méthodes biographiques --- Histoire --- Social Change --- Sociology & Social History --- Social Sciences --- Biographical methods. --- History. --- Wrong, Dennis, --- Reisman,David, --- Coleman, James Samuel, --- Gusfield, Joseph R., --- Greeley, Andrew M., --- Berger, Bennett M. --- MacCannell, Dean. --- Glazer, Nathan. --- Gagnon, John H. --- Cressey, Donald Ray, --- Marx, Gary T. --- Rosenblum, Barbara, --- Rossi, Alice S., --- Bernard, Jessie, --- Epstein, Cynthia Fuchs. --- Schwartz, Pepper. --- Roth, Guenther. --- Van den Berghe, Pierre L. --- Gans, Herbert J. --- Bendix, Reinhard. --- United States --- Biographical methods in sociology --- Biography in sociology --- Social theory --- Social sciences --- Bendix, R. --- Berghe, Pierre L. van den --- Den Berghe, Pierre L. van --- Roth, Günther, --- Schwartz, Judith Pepper --- Bernard, Jessie Shirley, --- Schaerr, Alice Emma, --- Gagnon, John, --- MacCannell, Earle Dean --- Gusfield, Joseph, --- Bendix, Reinhard --- Roth, Guenther, --- Coleman, James S., --- 20th century scholarship. --- 20th century sociology. --- academic men. --- academics. --- american sociology. --- autobiography. --- biographical events. --- burnout. --- career. --- childhood influences. --- contemporary sociology. --- determination. --- educational influences. --- emigration. --- equality. --- ethnicity. --- family history. --- fear. --- immigration. --- intellectual events. --- intellectual influences. --- mobility. --- personal accounts. --- personal stories. --- popular culture. --- private animosity. --- psychology. --- relativism. --- socialism. --- sociologists. --- sociology. --- women sociologists.
Listing 1 - 8 of 8 |
Sort by
|