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The Social Protests of 2020: Visceral Responses to Police
Brutality, COVID-19, and Circumscribed Sexuality collects voices
from various Black intellectuals – university professors, a
scientist, media communication specialist, poets, a visual artist,
and political activists – to illustrate how the simultaneity of
high-profile political events in the summer of 2020 manifest in our
consciousness at one time. Reflecting the contributors’ honest
visceral responses, the essays reveal the anguish, sadness, and
motivation to act that each of them experienced in light of police
brutality, COVID-19, and the Supreme Court's handling of employment
discrimination against LGBTQIA+ communities. These voices address,
in carefully reflected and theoretically formed ways, those
universal feelings that level all human beings, regardless of race,
ethnicity, gender identity, sexuality, economic status, and
education.
Risks, Identities and the Everyday focuses on the individual and
the lived experience of everyday risks - a departure from the focus
on risk from a macro level. The contributors look at risk and how
perceptions of risk, risk taking, and risk assessment increasingly
dominate our everyday lives and explore it in a variety of settings
not previously associated with risk theory, including: plastic
surgery, teenage sub-cultures, ageing and independent travel. The
volume moves risk away from abstract theorising about what people
may or may not fear about risks, to focus on how it actually
materialises and operates in everyday 'real' social interactions
and contexts. It also interrogates the rational self at the heart
of macro social theories by thinking through the construction of
risk choices and the socio-cultural dynamics that 'present' some
risks as acceptable, appropriate and necessary.
Ethnography in Social Science Practice explores ethnography's
increasing use across the social sciences, beyond its traditional
bases in social anthropology and sociology. It explores the
disciplinary roots of ethnographic research within social
anthropology, and contextualizes it within both field and
disciplinary settings.
The book is of two parts: Part one places ethnography as a
methodology in its historical, ethical and disciplinary context,
and also discusses the increasing popularity of ethnography across
the social sciences. Part two explores the stages of ethnographic
research via a selection of multidisciplinary case studies. A
number of key questions are explored:
- What exactly is ethnographic research and what makes it
different from other qualitative approaches?
- Why did ethnography emerge within one social science discipline
and not others?
- Why did its adoption across the social sciences prove
problematic?
- What are the methodological advantages and disadvantages of
doing ethnographic research?
- Why are ethnographers so concerned by issues of ethics,
politics, representation and power?
- What does ethnography look like within different social science
disciplines?
The book is aimed at social science students at both
undergraduate and postgraduate level and each chapter has pedagogic
features, including reflective activities and suggested further
readings for students.
Ethnography in Social Science Practice explores ethnography s
increasing use across the social sciences, beyond its traditional
bases in social anthropology and sociology. It explores the
disciplinary roots of ethnographic research within social
anthropology, and contextualizes it within both field and
disciplinary settings.
The book is of two parts: Part one places ethnography as a
methodology in its historical, ethical and disciplinary context,
and also discusses the increasing popularity of ethnography across
the social sciences. Part two explores the stages of ethnographic
research via a selection of multidisciplinary case studies. A
number of key questions are explored:
- What exactly is ethnographic research and what makes it
different from other qualitative approaches?
- Why did ethnography emerge within one social science discipline
and not others?
- Why did its adoption across the social sciences prove
problematic?
- What are the methodological advantages and disadvantages of
doing ethnographic research?
- Why are ethnographers so concerned by issues of ethics,
politics, representation and power?
- What does ethnography look like within different social science
disciplines?
The book is aimed at social science students at both
undergraduate and postgraduate level and each chapter has pedagogic
features, including reflective activities and suggested further
readings for students.
Risks, Identities and the Everyday focuses on the individual and
the lived experience of everyday risks - a departure from the focus
on risk from a macro level. The contributors look at risk and how
perceptions of risk, risk taking, and risk assessment increasingly
dominate our everyday lives and explore it in a variety of settings
not previously associated with risk theory, including: plastic
surgery, teenage sub-cultures, ageing and independent travel. The
volume moves risk away from abstract theorising about what people
may or may not fear about risks, to focus on how it actually
materialises and operates in everyday 'real' social interactions
and contexts. It also interrogates the rational self at the heart
of macro social theories by thinking through the construction of
risk choices and the socio-cultural dynamics that 'present' some
risks as acceptable, appropriate and necessary.
Being the Chosen explores Christian fundamentalism in the USA,
focusing particularly on the belief system of Protestant
fundamentalists. It establishes the key characteristics of the
Protestant worldview, investigating the degrees to which these are
adhered to amongst different groups and how such belief systems are
constructed and reinforced through everyday life. By presenting
rich empirical material, Being the Chosen sheds light on the manner
in which the Protestant fundamentalist worldview shapes and
constructs the beliefs and actions of its adherents, providing them
with agency and reinforcement in the face of oppositional forces.
As such, it will interest not only sociologists, but also scholars
of religion and the culture and society of the USA.
Nervous about statistics? This guide offers you a clear, straight
to the point break down of exploratory and descriptive statistics
and its potential. Anchored by lots of examples and exercises to
enhance your learning, this book will give you the know-how and
confidence needed to succeed on your quantitative research journey.
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