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cloth 0-87722-745-4 $55.50, Dec 90, Out of Stock Unavailable
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 256 pp
As part of the current rediscovery of the Sixties, this book brings together autobiographical essays by individuals whose radicalism developed in and around the academic discipline of sociology. The contributors expose the roots of their radical consciousness by examining interrelated personal and historical themes: how the socioeconomic and political conditions of the 1960s acted as an intellectual incubator that served to radicalize a significant number of sociologists; and how critical, radical, Marxist, and humanist sociology developed in the context of this era. Aiming to "redefine sociology to correspond to social reality," these academics broke from the institutional establishment and turned to radical interpretations of the persistence of racial and gender inequality, power relations, the permanence of privilege and poverty, the causes and consequences of war, among other topics.
 
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Movement and the Academy  Martin J. Murray, and Rhonda F. Levine
Part I: The History of Radical Sociology 
1. The Sociology Liberation Movement: Some Legacies and Lessons  Dick Flacks
2. Steps Taken Toward Liberating Sociologists  Alfred McClung Lee
3. The Early Years of the Sociology Liberation Movement  Carol A. Brown
4. Talking Sociology: A Sixties Fragment  Evan Stark
5. The Contradictions of Radical Sociology: Ideological Purity and Dissensus at Washington University  Henry Etzkowitz
6. Building Fires on the Prairie  Martin J. Murray
Part II: Becoming a Sociologist
7. Pages from a Journal of the Middle Left  Martin Oppenheimer
8. Critical Sociologists: Born or Made?  Norma Stolz Chinchilla
9. Coming Home: A Sociological Journey  Lynda Ann Ewen
10. The Making of a Class-Conscious "Race Man": Reflections on the Sixties  Robert G. Newby
11. Living and Learning Sociology: The Unorthodox Way  Hardy T. Frye
 12. At the Center and the Edge: Notes on a Life in and out of Sociology and the New Left  Robert J. S. Ross
Part III: Sociology in Action
13. "lf We Know, Then We Must Fight", The Origins of Radical Criminology in the U.S.  Tony Platt 
14. Notes from an Anarchist Sociologist: May 1989  Howard J. Ehrlich
Part IV: Documents
15. Fat-Cat Sociology  Martin Nicolaus
16. Women�s Caucus Statement and Resolutions to the General Business Meeting of the American Sociological Association, 3 September 1969
The Contributors
Index
Martin Oppenheimer is Associate Professor of Sociology at Rutgers University.
Martin J. Murray is Associate Professor of Sociology at State University of New York, Binghamton.
Rhonda F. Levine is Associate Professor of Sociology at Colgate University.
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