Three major social theories--mass society, pluralism, and
bureaucracy--are often employed to interpret and explain modern
societies. Although frequently invoked, the theories themselves are
poorly understood. This book seeks to clarify the background,
context, and major arguments of the theories, assess the claims and
validity of each, provide expert commentary, and suggest avenues
for further work in each area. Drawing on work in the humanities,
history, sociology, economic history, and political science,
Hamilton is able to provide readers with a clear, concise, and
accurate overview of the adequacy of these theories as well as
their empirical validity.
Beginning with the mass society theory, Hamilton offers a
systematic empirical assessment of its major tenets and its
abundant shortcomings. While the validity of the mass society
theory does not hold up, there is more support for pluralism, and
Hamilton adeptly assesses its arguments while suggesting a more
realistic and partitive reading of the theory. And while the image
of an all-pervasive and growing bureaucracy seems to overwhelm
society, Hamilton argues that the theory seriously misrepresents
the character of modern life. Working through each of these
theories using an integrated approach, the author concludes each
assessment with suggestions for which elements of the theory should
be retained, which should be reworked, and which should be
discarded altogether.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!