Michael Grimes looks at the voluminous scholarly literature
published by American social scientists in the twentieth century
and provides an overview and critique of the major theories,
conceptualizations, and measurements of class inequality. No book
published since the late fifties has had such scope. This volume
assembles a framework for interpreting and understanding the
changing character of the theories and methodologies used by
scholars to study class inequality based on two schools of social
theory--order and conflict--each with different assumptions about
human nature and society, and about the unique role(s) that class
plays in society. Grimes contends that theoretical perspectives
result from the interaction of the unique biographies of theorists
with the sociohistorical, ideological, and disciplinary settings
within which they work, and that the relative popularity of
perspectives on the subject within the discipline has varied over
time as the setting has changed.
Part I of the book assesses the diverse perspectives on class
inequality of early American sociologists. Part II examines the
rise of functionalism within American sociology and its subsequent
application to the issue of class inequality. Two conflict
perspectives on inequality--labeled neo-Weberian and neo-Marxist
theories--are discussed in Part III, while Part IV provides a
summary and concludes that there is evidence of a convergence of
sorts among contemporary perspectives on class inequality within
the discipline. The colume is organized to facilitate use by
graduate students and advanced undergraduate students as well as by
professional social scientists--particularly sociologists.
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