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This book argues that sport in the era of global or financialised
capitalism has undergone a process of fracturing, which requires a
re-assessment of longstanding and consensual accounts of
traditional-to-modern sporting activity. Considering rival concepts
of sport, it presents detailed, illustrative studies of various
types of sporting or athletic activity - including soccer, cricket,
rugby and track and field - to advance an alternative sociological
understanding of sport rooted in the philosophies and theories of
critical realism and critical theory. As such, A Critical Realist
Theory of Sport will appeal to scholars of sociology and social
theory with interests in sport, research methods and critical
realist thought.
This text seeks to enable medical sociology to establish a voice in
key debates in the social sciences. These debates concern
modernity, postmodernity, structuralism and poststructuralism as
they relate to medical sociology. Topics include: disease and
medicine in postmodern times; gender, health and the feminist
debate; the sociology of health and ageing; medicine and
complementary medicine; and death in postmodernity.
Professor Margaret Archer is a leading critical realist and major
contemporary social theorist. This edited collection seeks to
celebrate the scope and accomplishments of her work, distilling her
theoretical and empirical contributions into four sections which
capture the essence and trajectory of her research over almost four
decades. Long fascinated with the problem of structure and agency,
Archer's work has constituted a decade-long engagement with this
perennial issue of social thought. However, in spite of the deep
interconnections that unify her body of work, it is rarely treated
as a coherent whole. This is doubtless in part due to the
unforgiving rigour of her arguments and prose, but also a byproduct
of sociology's ongoing compartmentalisation. This edited collection
seeks to address this relative neglect by collating a selection of
papers, spanning Archer's career, which collectively elucidate both
the development of her thought and the value that can be found in
it as a systematic whole. This book illustrates the empirical
origins of her social ontology in her early work on the sociology
of education, as well as foregrounding the diverse range of
influences that have conditioned her intellectual trajectory: the
systems theory of Walter Buckley, the neo-Weberian analysis of
Lockwood, the critical realist philosophy of Roy Bhaskar and, more
recently, her engagement with American pragmatism and the Italian
school of relational sociology. What emerges is a series of
important contributions to our understanding of the relationship
between structure, culture and agency. Acting to introduce and
guide readers through these contributions, this book carries the
potential to inform exciting and innovative sociological research.
Drawing on a wide range of social theory, as well as empirical
inputs from studies of work, neighbourhoods, events, meeting places
and online self-help groups, this book suggests that communal forms
are constructed on the basis of communicative, material,
biographic-cultural, practice-based, and situational layers. The
concept of community has long provided an important point of
departure for the discipline of sociology, with the conflicting
conceptions of community before and into modernity embodied in
Ferdinand Toennies' Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft and in Emile
Durkheim's Mechanical and Organic Solidarity, providing the focus
for debate. Other contributors have maintained an interest in
communities as communions, interactional competencies, symbolic
identification, tribal connection, and more recently communication.
Drawing on such theoretical contributions, as well as empirical
inputs, the authors develop a more nuanced concept of community,
based on the notion that it is constructed from several different
layers. This concept is then presented as a sociological toolbox
with which to fuel approaches to examining societal challenges and
change. Providing a fresh approach to a core sociological question
that also has a wider societal relevance, Communal Forms will be of
interest to scholars and students concerned with social issues, and
for those with a more general interest in community, society and
its development over time.
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The Experience of Illness (Hardcover)
Ray Fitzpatrick, John Hinton, Stanton Newman, Graham Scambler, James Thompson
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R4,271
R3,506
Discovery Miles 35 060
Save R765 (18%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Originally published in 1984, this book focuses, firstly, on how
patients interpret and act in response to symptoms of illness;
secondly on how social and psychological factors influence the
treatment process; and thirdly, on certain kinds of illness where
the psychosocial perspective is of particular importance to the
providers of health care - for example, chronic or particularly
disabling illnesses. It demonstrates how essential it is to bring
an interdisciplinary perspective from the social and behavioural
sciences to an understanding and interpretation of behaviour in
relation to illness. It will be of central concern to all health
professionals in training and in practice and to social scientists
interested in health care.
This book presents a novel approach to framing the concept of
stigma, and understanding why and how it functions. Graham Scambler
extends his analysis beyond common social interactionist
understandings of stigma by linking experiences to the larger
social structure-the political economy. A Sociology of Shame and
Blame contends that stigma is being 'weaponised' as part of a
calculated political strategy favouring capital accumulation over
justice, and addresses how the shame associated with stigma has
taken on the additional dimension of blame through
micro-interactions. The unique Insider-Outsider approach that
Scambler harnesses draws on micro and macro social theory to
identify links between the prevalence of stigma and agency, culture
and structure, and will be an original and key reference point for
students and scholars across the social and behavioural sciences,
including, but not limited to, sociology, anthropology, psychology,
public health and social policy.
It is now accepted that many of the determinants of health and
health care are social. This volume offers a philosophical and
theoretical frame within which the nature and extent of this might
be optimally examined. The analysis is rooted in Roy Bhaskar's
basic and dialectical critical realism, although it draws also on
the critical theory of Jurgen Habermas. It purports to provide an
ontologically and epistemologically grounded comparative sociology
of contemporary health and health care in the twenty-first century.
Carrying a fourfold agenda, the volume sets out a dialectical
critical realist frame for a comparative sociology of health and
health care; it clarifies sociology's potential and limitations; it
suggests a research programme and a series of questions for
investigation; and it offers an argument for an action sociology
embedded in a dialectical theory of transformative action. This
volume will be of interest to students and scholars in the areas of
philosophy, sociology and critical realism, as well as those
working in health and social care.
This book argues that sport in the era of global or financialised
capitalism has undergone a process of fracturing, which requires a
re-assessment of longstanding and consensual accounts of
traditional-to-modern sporting activity. Considering rival concepts
of sport, it presents detailed, illustrative studies of various
types of sporting or athletic activity - including soccer, cricket,
rugby and track and field - to advance an alternative sociological
understanding of sport rooted in the philosophies and theories of
critical realism and critical theory. As such, A Critical Realist
Theory of Sport will appeal to scholars of sociology and social
theory with interests in sport, research methods and critical
realist thought.
Originally published in 1987, this book builds bridges between
medical sociology and mainstream theory. It does so by
demonstrating in new and important ways how selected theories of
major thinkers like Marx, Durkheim, Weber, Freud, Parsons, Goffman,
Foucault, Habermas and Offe stand to inform, and in turn be
informed by the often highly focused and empirical studies of
health, disease and health care found in contemporary medical
sociology. The topics covered include doctor-patient interaction
and the formation of health policy.
Contemporary Theorists for Medical Sociology explores the work of
key social theorists and the application of their ideas to issues
around health and illness. Encouraging students and researchers to
use mainstream sociological thought to inform and deepen their
knowledge and understanding of the many arenas of health and
healthcare, this text discusses and critically reviews the work of
several influential contemporary thinkers, including - Foucault,
Bauman, Habermas, Luhmann, Bourdieu, Merleau-Ponty, Wallerstein,
Archer, Deleuze, Guattari, and Castells. Each chapter includes a
critical introduction to the central theses of a major social
theorist, ways in which their ideas might inform medical sociology
and some worked examples of how their ideas can be applied.
Containing contributions from established scholars, rising stars
and innovative practitioners, this book is a valuable read for
those studying and researching the sociology of health and illness.
Contemporary Theorists for Medical Sociology explores the work of
key social theorists and the application of their ideas to issues
around health and illness. Encouraging students and researchers to
use mainstream sociological thought to inform and deepen their
knowledge and understanding of the many arenas of health and
healthcare, this text discusses and critically reviews the work of
several influential contemporary thinkers, including - Foucault,
Bauman, Habermas, Luhmann, Bourdieu, Merleau-Ponty, Wallerstein,
Archer, Deleuze, Guattari, and Castells. Each chapter includes a
critical introduction to the central theses of a major social
theorist, ways in which their ideas might inform medical sociology
and some worked examples of how their ideas can be applied.
Containing contributions from established scholars, rising stars
and innovative practitioners, this book is a valuable read for
those studying and researching the sociology of health and illness.
The contribution of the German sociologist and philosopher Jurgen Habermas has proved seminal for attempts to understand the nature of social change in the context of global capitalism. This book provides an accessible introduction to his work and shows how his theories can be fruitfully applied to a wide range of topics in the sociology of health and illness including: * lay health knowledge * doctor-patient interaction * health care decision-making * health inequalities * new social movements in health * health care rationing * the Foucault perspective. Habermas, Critical Theory and Health will open up both new issues and new lines of empirical enquiry which will be of special interest to teachers and students of social theory and the sociology of health and illness and offers healthcare professionals new perspectives on their practice.
The contribution of the German sociologist and philosopher Jurgen Habermas has proved seminal for attempts to understand the nature of social change in the context of global capitalism. This book provides an accessible introduction to his work and shows how his theories can be fruitfully applied to a wide range of topics in the sociology of health and illness including: * lay health knowledge * doctor-patient interaction * health care decision-making * health inequalities * new social movements in health * health care rationing * the Foucault perspective. Habermas, Critical Theory and Health will open up both new issues and new lines of empirical enquiry which will be of special interest to teachers and students of social theory and the sociology of health and illness and offers healthcare professionals new perspectives on their practice.
Contributors ranging from researchers, activists and sex workers re-examine prostitution. The book covers male and female sex workers; their status in law; drugs; health; changing nature of sex work ; pimps and redefining prostitution.
The growth of AIDS has focused renewed attention on the institution
of prostitution. In contrast to the moral panic reaction of some
sectors of society, very different initiatives are being displayed
by other groups in relation to the need to scrutinize the social,
moral and legal status of prostitution and to reflect on the
arguments in support of or against legalising brothels, paying
particular concern to prostitutes' own health. Rethinking
Prostitution covers male as well as female sex workers and
considers in detail their status in law; drugs; issues of health
and health care; the changing nature of sex work; partners,
boyfriends and pimps; and the potential for redefining
prostitution. By drawing on the expertise of researchers across all
aspects of the industry, this up-to-date text focuses on an
institution and industry ripe for re-assessment. Rethinking
Prostitution will be of considerable interest to students,
lecturers and researchers in medical sociology and women's studies,
social workers in training and practice as well as the general
reader as an area of topical interest and concern.
What does modern medical science know about menstruation? The
menstrual cycle is less well understood by physicians than is
commonly assumed and medical understanding of disorders associated
with it are also limited. This study challenges the orthodox
thinking in both society and medicine on menstruation. The authors
base their study on women's own experiences and accounts of
menstruation and menstrual disorders, drawing on a wide range of
studies including their own. The book shows that women are often
socialized to interpret the menstruum in negative terms and as
something essentially private to be contained within the female
domain. Taking an unorthodox approach, the authors incorporate a
discussion of how menstruation is perceived within male culture and
how the perspective of the medical profession has remained
discernibly patriarchal. They show the significance of this in
relation to women's experience within the family and at work. They
end the book by focusing on the medicalisation of menstruation and
the advantages and disadvantages for women of the greater access to
the sick role this development implies.
A new edition of a seminal textbook that offers an up-to-date,
concise and theoretically and empirically informed introduction to
the core issues in the sociology of health and health care. It
includes updated chapters on established themes of social aspects
of health, disease and medical practice, social structures and the
organisation of health services, as well as brand new chapters on
contemporary topics such as globalisation, the sociology of the
body and digital technologies. As proven by previous editions, this
text has special salience for students of medicine and allied
health programmes. Moreover, with increased attention to
international perspectives and examples and an accessible writing
style, it remains an ideal choice for undergraduate and
postgraduate health modules on sociology courses across the world.
New to this Edition: - Increased emphasis on global perspectives
and international examples - All existing chapters thoroughly
updated - New chapters on globalisation and health,
re-conceptualising bodies and digital health and health care ensure
that the book takes the latest developments in the discipline into
account
Medical sociology was first recognizable as a distinct area of
study in the 1950s and is now probably the largest specialized area
of sociology. This collection comprises a comprehensive statement
of the history, current concerns and relevance of medical sociology
to an understanding of health and health care worldwide. The
articles included are genuinely international in two important
respects: they represent the best of contemporary scholarship
worldwide, and they have applicability to all types of society and
health care systems. A general introduction in the first volume
provides a review of the development and state of medical sociology
internationally as well as a rationale for the collection as a
whole. Each of the four volumes also has its own introduction, and
each of the four sections within each volume is preceded by a brief
rationale. Titles also available in this series include, Child
Welfare (November 2004, 4 Volumes, GBP495) and the forthcoming
collection Health Care Systems (2005, 3 Volumes, c.GBP395).
It is now accepted that many of the determinants of health and
health care are social. This volume offers a philosophical and
theoretical frame within which the nature and extent of this might
be optimally examined. The analysis is rooted in Roy Bhaskar's
basic and dialectical critical realism, although it draws also on
the critical theory of Jurgen Habermas. It purports to provide an
ontologically and epistemologically grounded comparative sociology
of contemporary health and health care in the twenty-first century.
Carrying a fourfold agenda, the volume sets out a dialectical
critical realist frame for a comparative sociology of health and
health care; it clarifies sociology's potential and limitations; it
suggests a research programme and a series of questions for
investigation; and it offers an argument for an action sociology
embedded in a dialectical theory of transformative action. This
volume will be of interest to students and scholars in the areas of
philosophy, sociology and critical realism, as well as those
working in health and social care.
In examining the social and psychological aspects of epilepsy, the
author takes not only the perspectives of individuals and their
families, but also popular conceptions of the disorder. The result
is an illuminating account of the social reality of epilepsy that
demonstrates the distinctive contribution that the social sciences
can play in understanding illness.
Drawing on a wide range of social theory, as well as empirical
inputs from studies of work, neighbourhoods, events, meeting places
and online self-help groups, this book suggests that communal forms
are constructed on the basis of communicative, material,
biographic-cultural, practice-based, and situational layers. The
concept of community has long provided an important point of
departure for the discipline of sociology, with the conflicting
conceptions of community before and into modernity embodied in
Ferdinand Toennies' Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft and in Emile
Durkheim's Mechanical and Organic Solidarity, providing the focus
for debate. Other contributors have maintained an interest in
communities as communions, interactional competencies, symbolic
identification, tribal connection, and more recently communication.
Drawing on such theoretical contributions, as well as empirical
inputs, the authors develop a more nuanced concept of community,
based on the notion that it is constructed from several different
layers. This concept is then presented as a sociological toolbox
with which to fuel approaches to examining societal challenges and
change. Providing a fresh approach to a core sociological question
that also has a wider societal relevance, Communal Forms will be of
interest to scholars and students concerned with social issues, and
for those with a more general interest in community, society and
its development over time.
Professor Margaret Archer is a leading critical realist and major
contemporary social theorist. This edited collection seeks to
celebrate the scope and accomplishments of her work, distilling her
theoretical and empirical contributions into four sections which
capture the essence and trajectory of her research over almost four
decades. Long fascinated with the problem of structure and agency,
Archer's work has constituted a decade-long engagement with this
perennial issue of social thought. However, in spite of the deep
interconnections that unify her body of work, it is rarely treated
as a coherent whole. This is doubtless in part due to the
unforgiving rigour of her arguments and prose, but also a byproduct
of sociology's ongoing compartmentalisation. This edited collection
seeks to address this relative neglect by collating a selection of
papers, spanning Archer's career, which collectively elucidate both
the development of her thought and the value that can be found in
it as a systematic whole. This book illustrates the empirical
origins of her social ontology in her early work on the sociology
of education, as well as foregrounding the diverse range of
influences that have conditioned her intellectual trajectory: the
systems theory of Walter Buckley, the neo-Weberian analysis of
Lockwood, the critical realist philosophy of Roy Bhaskar and, more
recently, her engagement with American pragmatism and the Italian
school of relational sociology. What emerges is a series of
important contributions to our understanding of the relationship
between structure, culture and agency. Acting to introduce and
guide readers through these contributions, this book carries the
potential to inform exciting and innovative sociological research.
This is a succinct and comprehensive account of the contemporary
sociology of sport. It starts by tracing the key 'moments' in the
transition from pre-modern to modern sport, giving detailed
accounts of the athletic competition in the ancient games at
Olympia; the genesis of modern track-and-field athletics in
nineteenth-century England; and the reconstruction by de Coubertin
and unfolding of the Olympic movement through the twentieth
century. The second section analyses features of sport in detail:
The links between exercise, sport and health, including a look at
growing rates of obesity and of the role of drug use in society and
sport The hyper-commodification of football in the
1990sRepresentations of sport in the media Sports iconography, with
sociological portraits of Muhammad Ali and David Beckham The
re-emergence of violence in sport The third section critically
analyses the various theoretical approaches adopted by
sociologists, and presents a distinctive new theoretical framework
for understanding the changing role of sport in society in the era
of global disorganized capitalism. This is key reading for students
and researchers in sociology of sport and leisure, sport science
and health.
A new edition of a seminal textbook that offers an up-to-date,
concise and theoretically and empirically informed introduction to
the core issues in the sociology of health and health care. It
includes updated chapters on established themes of social aspects
of health, disease and medical practice, social structures and the
organisation of health services, as well as brand new chapters on
contemporary topics such as globalisation, the sociology of the
body and digital technologies. As proven by previous editions, this
text has special salience for students of medicine and allied
health programmes. Moreover, with increased attention to
international perspectives and examples and an accessible writing
style, it remains an ideal choice for undergraduate and
postgraduate health modules on sociology courses across the world.
New to this Edition: - Increased emphasis on global perspectives
and international examples - All existing chapters thoroughly
updated - New chapters on globalisation and health,
re-conceptualising bodies and digital health and health care ensure
that the book takes the latest developments in the discipline into
account
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